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[主观题]

Where Do Dreams Come from?Do you often dream at night? Most people do. When they wake in t

Where Do Dreams Come from?

Do you often dream at night? Most people do. When they wake in the morning they say to them selves, "What a strange dream I had! I wonder what made me dream that."

Sometimes dreams are frightening. Terrible creatures threaten and pursue us. Sometimes, in dreams, wishes come tree. We can fly through the air or float from mountain-tops. At other times we are troubled by dreams in which everything is confused. We are lost and can't find our way home. The world seems to have been turned upside-down and nothing makes sense.

In dreams we act very strangely. We do, things which we would never do when we're awake. We think and say things we would never think and say. Why are dreams so strange? Where do dreams come from?

People have been trying to answer this since the beginning of time. But no one has produced a more satisfying answer than a man called Sigmund Freud. One's dream-world seems strange and unfamiliar, he said, because dreams come from a part of one's mind which one can neither recognise nor control. He named this the "unconscious mind".

Sigmund Freud was born about a hundred years ago. He lived most of his life in Vienna, Austria, but ended his days in London, soon after the beginning of the Second World War.

Freud was one of the great explorers of our time. But the new worlds he explored were inside man himself. For the unconscious mind is like a deep well, full of memories and feelings. These memories and feelings have been stored there from the moment of our birth—perhaps even before birth. Our conscious mind has forgotten them. We do not suspect that they are there until some unhappy or unusual experlence causes us to remember, or to dream dreams. Then suddenly we see a face we had forgotten long ago. We feel the same jealous fear and bitter disappointments we felt when we were little children.

This discovery of Freud's is very important ff we wish to understand why people act as they do. For the unconscious forces inside us are at least as powerful as the conscious forces we know about. Why do we choose one friend rather than another? Why does one story make us cry or laugh while another story doesn't affect us at all? Perhaps we know why. If we don't, the reasons may lie deep in our unconscious minds.

When Freud was a child he wanted to become a great soldier and win honour for his country. At that time Austria and Germany were at war with each other. His father used to take Sigmund down to the rail way station to watch the trains come in from the battle-fields. The trains were full of wounded soldiers. There were men who had lost all eye, an arm or a leg fighting in tile war. Many of the soldiers were suffering great pain.

Young Sigmund watched the wounded men as they were moved from the trains into the hay-carts that carried them to the hospital. He was very sorry for them. He pitied them so much that he said to the teacher at his school, "Let us boys make bandages for the poor soldiers as our sisters in the girls' school do."

Even then, Freud cared about the sufferings of others, so it isn't surprising that he became a doctor when he grew up. Like other doctors he learned all about the way in which the human body works. But he became more and more curious about the human mind. He went to Pads to study with a famous French doctor, Charcot. Charcot's special study was diseases of the mind and nerves.

At that time it seemed that no one knew very much about tile mind. If a person went mad, or "out of his mind" ,there was not much that could be done about it. There was little help or comfort for the madman or his family. People didn't understand at all what was happening to him. Had be been possessed by a devil or evil spirit? Was God punishing him for wrongdoing? Often such people were shut away from the company of ordinary civi

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更多“Where Do Dreams Come from?Do you often dream at night? Most people do. When they wake in t”相关的问题

第1题

听力原文:As the proverb says, "No one knows the value of health until he loses it." In oth

听力原文: As the proverb says, "No one knows the value of health until he loses it." In other words, nothing is more valuable than health.

It is clear that health is the foundation of one's future success. If you become sick, it is nearly impossible to pursue your career effectively, much less to make your dreams come true. On the other hand, if you are strong, you can go all out to overcome the obstacles that lie ahead of you. Health is the resource of our energy. What should we do to maintain our health? First, we should exercise every day to strengthen our muscles. Second, we might as well keep good hours, ff we get up early, we can breathe fresh air and see the sunrise. This habit can do wonders for our outlook on life. Third, there is a proverb that says, "Prevention is better than cure." ff you pay close attention to your health, you can avoid getting sick, or at least cure yourself of a disease while it is still in its beginning stage.

In conclusion, health is more important than wealth. Those who are rich but poor in health are on more fortunate than those who are poor, but healthy in body. If you want your wish to come true, health is the most important component of your success.

(30)

A.Wealth.

B.Health.

C.Habit.

D.Disease.

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第2题

Please excuse me if I'm a little pensive (哀伤的) today.Mark is leaving, and I'm feeling k

Please excuse me if I'm a little pensive (哀伤的) today.

Mark is leaving, and I'm feeling kind of sad.

You probably don't know Mark, but you might be lucky enough to know someone just like him. He's been the heart and soul of the office for a couple of years, combining exemplary professional skills with a sweet notate and gentle disposition. He's never been all that interested in getting credit for the terrific work he does. He just wants to do ins job, and to do it superbly well.

And now he's moving on to an exciting new professional opportunity. It sounds like it could be the chance of a lifetime, and we're genuinely, sincerely pleased for him. But that doesn't make it any easier to say goodbye to a dear friend and trusted colleague.

Life has a way of throwing these curve balls at us. Just when we start to get comfortable with a person, a place or a situation, something comes along to alter the recipe. A terrific neighbor moves away. Someone in the family graduates. A child finds new love and loyalties through marriage. The family's principle bread-winner is laid off.

Our ability to cope with change and disruption determines, to a great degree, our peace, happiness and contentment in life.

But how do we do that? Philosophers have considered the question for centuries, and their responses have been varied. According to the author of the Biblical book of Ecclesiastes, comfort can be found in remembering that "to every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under heaven." Kahlil Gibran urged his listeners to "let today embrace the past with remembrance, and the future with longing."

A friend of mine who works for the government is fond of reminding his fellow bureaucrats that "survivability depends upon adaptability." And then there's Chris, the California surf-rat, who once told me that the answer to life's problems can be summed up in four words: "Go with the flow."

"It's like surfing," Chris explained. "You can't organize the ocean. Waves just happen. You ride' em where they take you, then you paddle back out there and catch the next one. Sure, you're always hoping for the perfect wave where you can get, like, you know, totally tubular. But mostly you just take' em the way they come. It's not like you're trying to nail Jell-O (果冻布丁) to a tree, you know?"

I'm not exactly sure, but I think Chris was saying that life is a series of events —both good and bad. No matter how deft (熟练的) your organizational skills, there will always be life-influencing factors over which you have no control. The truly successful person expects the unexpected, and is prepared to make adjustments should the need arise —as it almost always does.

That doesn't mean you don't keep trying to make all your dreams come tree. It just means that when things come up that aren't exactly in your plan, you work around them —and then you move on. Of course, some bumps along the road of life are easier to take than others. A rained-out picnic, for example, is easier to cope with than the sudden death of a loved one. But the principle is the same.

"Change, indeed, is painful, yet ever needful," said philosopher Thomas Carlyle. "And if memory have its force and worth, so also has hope."

We're going to miss Mark, just like you'll miss that graduate, that neighbor or that newlywed. But rather than dwell on the sadness of our parting, we'll focus on our hopes for a brighter future —for him, and for us. And then we'll go out and do everything we can to make that future happen.

Until our plans change —again.

What do we know about Mark from the passage?

A.Mark has been transferred to another job because of his poor work.

B.Mark prefers credit to his own interest.

C.Mark has pleasant personality and plays a key role in the office.

D.Mark will have a very promising future career.

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第3题

Harsh Reality of the American Dream— by Humphrey Hawksley (BBC News, United States)It was

Harsh Reality of the American Dream

— by Humphrey Hawksley

(BBC News, United States)

It was a brilliant, hot day on the Seattle waterfront, with unspoilt views across the bay to outlying islands.

Just beyond a stretch of grass where people lay with books and lovers, came the melody of live unaccompanied singing. It turned out to be four men outside a cafe singing a love song about Cupid, each with different voice ranges, and a deep, swaying crowd, clapping along.

The Starbucks logo of the cafe struck me as a little old-fashioned until someone mentioned that this was the first Starbucks ever opened anywhere in the world.

I had come to Seattle because of a recent survey by the Centre for Economic Performance in London, on how easy or difficult it was to get rich in different parts of the world —or if not rich, at least move out of poverty.

"If you are born into poverty in the US," said one of its authors, "you are actually more likely to remain in poverty than in other countries in Europe, the Nordic countries, even Canada, which you would think would not be that different."

Possibilities

The Study, together with general anti-American sentiment (情绪) which has become more prevalent since the Iraq war, raised for me a question about the American dream —the idea that the United States is a place where anything is possible.

I had chosen Seattle not only because Starbucks was created there, but also because Microsoft and Amazon Books and Boeing airliners all come from this small city. Dreams, if you want, which began small but are now global brands.

"Great day, isn't it?" I turned to see the lined, and drawn face of a man I will call Dave. "Are you getting what you want?"

We had met a couple of days earlier when he was having breakfast at a charity for the broke and homeless, and I had asked him if he believed in the American dream.

"The American dream." Dave said, eating a muffin and wiping his lips with a paper napkin.

"Well, it comes and goes. It will come again."

Winners and losers

In a low-ceilinged eating hall, maybe 100 men sat side by side along trestle tables. They had queued up since five, registered in case there was any work, then ate while security guards watched over them in case there was trouble.

In Europe or just across the border in Canada, they would be more likely to get social security, but this was America, where society is harshly divided into winners and losers.

Strangely, though, there seemed to be little resentment or blame of government. American culture is about self-reliance and the individual fighting a way through.

"The American dream," said one of the men, his eyes dartingly alive, his nose so skewed it must have been broken many times in different fights.

"I guess you are talking about a home, wife, children and all that."

"Do you have it?" I said.

"No. No. I don't. I had my opportunities, but I lost."

Control

Just up the road in a small print shop, a fit, thoughtful former air force officer, Bobby Ray Forbes, was slotting calendars into envelopes.

His life collapsed when his marriage went wrong. He had ended up on the street, but recently had managed to get a job a

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第4题

听力原文:M: Go straight until you come to the stoplight. Turn to the left and go about thr
ee miles. When you get to the Argo Grocery Store, turn right. You can't miss the bus station.

W: Oh, I see. Thanks a lot. I think I can find it.

Q: What is the woman trying to do?

(17)

A.Get directions to the bus station.

B.Get to the grocery store.

C.Give the man directions to the bus station.

D.Find out where the stoplight is.

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第5题

Dreams really can come true!()
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第6题

In the first paragraph the author states that ________.A) dreams cannot be said to

In the first paragraph the author states that ________.

A) dreams cannot be said to be prophetic even though a few have come true

B) dreams are prophetic because some of them did come true

C) dreams may come true if clearly remembered

D) dreams and reality are closely related

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第7题

Our dreams will finally ___ .

A.come true

B.be true

C.get true

D.turn true

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第8题

听力原文:W: Could you tell me how to get to the bus station from here?M: Go straight until

听力原文:W: Could you tell me how to get to the bus station from here?

M: Go straight until you come to the stoplight. Turn to the left and go about three miles. When you get to the Agro Grocery Store, turn right. You can't miss it.

Q: What is the woman trying to do?

(13)

A.Get directions to the bus station.

B.Get to the grocery store.

C.Give the man directions to the bus station.

D.Find out where the stoplight is.

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第9题

听力原文:M: Mm, it's not a bed sizable room, is it?W: Oh, it's great! It's lovely. Oh, and

听力原文:M: Mm, it's not a bed sizable room, is it?

W: Oh, it's great! It's lovely. Oh, and look at that great! Oh, we can have the two chairs right in front of the fireplace there in the middle of the room and toast our feet.

M: The first tiring we ought to do is just decide where the bed's going.

W: What about right here next to the door, sort of behind the door as you come in?

M: Yes, that's a good idea, just as you come in, just in that corner then.

W: Yes. Well now, let's think. What else?

M: What else is there? Well there's that huge wardrobe of yours. That's got to go somewhere.

W: What about over here-you know - across from the fireplace there, because then, in that little corner where it... where the wall goes back...look, over there. That'd do, wouldn't it?

M: Ok, well we'll put the word, be them then.

W: What about your desk? Where you going to put that?

M: I need lots of fight, so I think, in that far corner between the two windows, OK?

W: Oh, I see in the comer there. That'd be good.

M: So the desk goes there.

W: So you'd have your chair with your back to the fireplace? Yes,

M: Yes. And there's the chest of drawers.

W: Oh, that'd be nice between the two windows there, right in the middle. I know you're going to like it.

(20)

A.It's not a bad sizable room for the couple.

B.The first thing they ought to do is just decide where the bed's going.

C.The man needs lots of light.

D.There in the middle of the room is the fireplace.

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第10题

听力原文:M: Mm, it's not a bad sizable room, is it?W: Oh, it's great ! It's lovely. Oh, an

听力原文:M: Mm, it's not a bad sizable room, is it?

W: Oh, it's great ! It's lovely. Oh, and look at that fireplace! Oh, we can have the two chairs right in front of the fireplace there in the middle of the room and toast our feet.

M: The first thing we ought to do is just decide where the bed's going.

W: What about right here next to the door, sort of behind the door as you come in?

M: Yes, that's a good idea -just as you come in, just in that comer there.

W: Yes. Well now, let's think. What else?

M: What else is there? Well there's that huge wardrobe of yours. That's got to go .somewhere.

W: What about over here -you know -across from the fireplace there, because then, in that little comer where it ... where the wall goes back ... look, over there. That'd do, wouldn't it?

M: Ok, well we'll put the wardrobe there then.

W: What about your desk? Where are you going to put that?

M: I need lots of light, so I think, in that far comer between the two windows, OK?

W: Oh, I see in the comer there. That'd be good.

M: So the desk goes there.

W: So you'd have your chair with your back to the fireplace? Yes, that'll be all right.

M: Yes. And there's the chest of drawers.

W: Oh, that'd be nice between the two windows there, right in the middle. I know you're going to like it.

(20)

A.It' s not a bad sizable room for the couple.

B.The first thing they ought to do is just decide where the bed's going.

C.The man needs lots of light.

D.There in the middle of the room is the fireplace.

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