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杨鹏GREGMAT长难句 全书英文句子整理打印版.docx

1、杨鹏GREGMAT长难句 全书英文句子整理打印版1, that sex ratio will be favored which maximizes the number of descendants an individual will have and hence the number of gene copies transmitted. 2, Hardys weakness derived from his apparent inability to control the comings and goings of these divergent impulses and from h

2、is unwillingness to cultivate and sustain the energetic and risky ones.3,Virginia Woolfs provocative statement about her intentions in writing Mrs. Dalloway has regularly been ignored by the critics, since it highlights an aspect of her literary interests very different from the traditional picture

3、of the “poetic” novelist concerned with examining states of reverie and vision and with following the intricate pathways of individual consciousness.4, as she put it in The Common Reader, “it is safe to say that not a single law has been framed or one stone set upon another because of anything Chauc

4、er said or wrote; and yet, as we read him, we are absorbing morality at every pore.”5,with the conclusion of a burst of activity, the lactic acid level is high in the body fluids, leaving the large animal vulnerable to attack until the acid is reconverted, via oxidative metabolism, by the liver into

5、 glucose, which is then sent (in part) back to the muscles for glycogen resynthesis.6, although Gutman admits that forced separation by sale was frequent, he shows that the slaves preference, revealed most clearly on plantations where sale was infrequent, was very much for stable monogamy.7, Gutman

6、argues convincingly that the stability of the Black family encouraged the transmission of and so was crucial in sustaining the black heritage of folklore, music, and religious expression from one generation to another, a heritage that slaves were continually fashioning out of their African and Ameri

7、can experiences.8, this preference for exogamy, Gutman suggests, may have derived from West African rules governing marriage, which, though they from one tribal group to another, all involved some kind of prohibition against unions with close kin.9, His thesis works relatively well when applied to d

8、iscrimination against Blacks in the US, but his definition of racial prejudice as “racially based negative prejudgements against a group generally accepted as a race in any given region of ethnic competition,” can be interpreted as also including hostility toward such ethnic groups as the Chinese in

9、 California and the Jews in medieval Europe.10, such variations in size, shape, chemistry, conduction speed, excitation threshold, and the like as had been demonstrated in nerve cells remained negligible in significance for any possible correlation with the manifold dimensions of mental experience.1

10、1, it was possible to demonstrate by other methods refined structural differences among neuron types; however, proof was lacking that the quality of the impulse or its condition was influenced by these differences, which seemed instead to influence the developmental patterning of the neural circuits

11、.12, although qualitative variance among nerve energies was never rigidly disproved, the doctrine was generally abandoned in favor of the opposing view, namely, that nerve impulses are essentially homogeneous in quality and are transmitted as “common currency” throughout the nervous system.13, other

12、 experiments revealed slight variations in the size, number, arrangement, and interconnection of the nerve cells, but as far as psychoneural correlations were concerned, the obvious similarities of these sensory fields to each other seemed much more remarkable than any of the minute differences.14,

13、although some experiments show that, as an object becomes familiar, its internal representation becomes more holistic and the recognition process correspondingly more parallel, the weight of evidence seems to support the serial hypothesis, at least for objects that are not notably simple and familia

14、r.15, in large part as a consequence of the feminist movement, historians have focused a great deal of attention in recent years on determining more accurately the status of women in various periods.16, if one begin by examining why ancients refer to Amazons, it becomes clear that ancient Greek desc

15、ription of such societies were meant not so much to represent observed historical fact real Amazonian societies but rather to offer “moral lessons” on the supposed outcome of womens rule in their own society.17, thus, for instance, it may come as a shock to mathematicians to learn that the Schroding

16、er equation for the hydrogen atom is not a literally correct description of this atom, but only an approximation to a somewhat more correct equation taking account of spin, magnetic dipole, and relativistic effects; and that this corrected equation is itself only an imperfect approximation to an inf

17、inite set of quantum field theoretical equations.18, the physicist rightly dreads precise argument, since an argument that is convincing only if it is precise loses all its force if the assumptions on which it is based are slightly changed, whereas an argument that is convincing though imprecise may

18、 well be stable under small perturbations of its underlying assumption. 19, however, as they gained cohesion, the Bluestockings came to regard themselves as a womens group and to possess a sense of female solidarity lacking in the salonnieres, who remained isolated from one another by the primacy ea

19、ch held in her own salon.20, as my own studies have advanced, I have been increasingly impressed with the functional similarities between insect and vertebrate societies and less so with the structural differences that seem, at first glance, to constitute such an immense gulf between them.21, althou

20、gh fiction assuredly springs from political circumstances, it authors react to those circumstances in ways other than ideological, and talking about novels and stories primarily as instruments of ideology circumvents much of the fictional enterprise. 22, is this a defect, or are the authors working

21、out of, or trying to forge, a different kind of aesthetic23, in addition, the style of some Black novels, like Jean Toomers Cane, verges on expressionism or surrealism; dose this technique provide a counterpoint to the prevalent theme that portrays the fate against which Black heroes are potted, a t

22、heme usually conveyed by more naturalistic modes of expression24, Black Fiction surveys a wide variety of novels, bringing to our attention in the process some fascinating and little-known works like James Weldon Johnsons Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man.25, although these molecules allow radiatio

23、n at visible wavelengths, where most of the energy of sunlight is concentrated, to pass through, they absorb some of the longer-wavelength, infrared emissions radiated from the Earths surface, radiation that would otherwise be transmitted back into the space.26, the role those anthropologist ascribe

24、 to evolution is not of dictating the details of human behavior but one of imposing constrains ways of feeling, thinking, and acting that “come naturally” in archetypal situation in any culture.27,which of the following most probably provides an appropriate analogy from human morphology for the “det

25、ails” versus “constrains” distinction made in the passage in relation to human behavior28, a low number of algal cells in the presence of a high number of grazers suggested, but did not prove, that the grazers had removed most of the algae.29, perhaps the fact that many of these first studies consid

26、ered only algae of a size that could be collected in a net (net phytoplankton), a practice that over-looked the smaller phytoplankton (nannoplankton) that we now know grazers are most likely to feed on, led to a de-emphasis of the role of grazers in subsequent research. 30, studies by Hargrave and G

27、reen estimated natural community grazing rates by measuring feeding rates of individual zooplankton species in the laboratory and then computing community grazing rates for field conditions using the known population density of grazers.31, in the periods of peak zooplankton abundance, that is, in th

28、e late spring and in the summer, Haney recorded maximum daily community grazing rates, for nutrient poor lakes and bog lakes, respectively, of percent and 114 percent of daily phytoplankton production.32, the hydrologic cycle, a major topic in this science, is the complete cycle of phenomena through

29、 which water passes, beginning as atmospheric water vapor, passing into liquid and solid form as precipitation, thence along and into the ground surface, and finally again returning to the form of atmospheric water vapor by means of evaporation and transpiration.33, only when a system possesses natu

30、ral or artificial boundaries that associate the water within in with the hydrologic cycle may the entire system properly be termed hydrogeologic.34, the historian Frederick J. Turner wrote in the 1890s that the agrarian discontent that had been developing steadily in the US since about 1870 had been

31、 precipitated by the closing of the internal frontier that is, the depletion of available new land need 35, in the early 1950s, historians who studied preindustrial Europe (which we may define here as Europe in the period from roughly 1300 to 1800) began, for the first time in large number, to inves

32、tigate more of the preindustrial European population than the 2 or 3 percent who comprised the political and social elite: the kings, generals, judges, nobles, bishops, and local magnates who had hitherto usually filled history books.36, historians such as Le Roy Ladurie have used the documents to extract case histories, which have illuminated the attitudes of different social groups (these attitudes include, but are not confined to, attitudes towards crime and the law) and have revealed how the authorities administered justice. 37, it can be inferred from the passage that a historian who wi

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