2009年12月大學英語六級復合式聽寫
來源:滬江聽寫酷
2011-05-06 18:04
本聽寫資料為2009年12月的英語六級復合式聽寫部分。已省略direction部分,同學們將空格中的內容填寫出來即可。
The ancient Greeks developed basic memory systems called mnemonics. The name is___from their Goddess of memory “Mnemosyne”. In the ancient world, a trained memory was an___ asset, particularly in public life. There were no___devices for taking notes, and early Greek orators(演說家) delivered long speeches with great___because they learned the speeches using mnemonic systems. The Greeks discovered that human memory is___ an associative process—that it works by linking things together. For example, think of an apple. The ___ your brain registers the word “apple”, it ___ the shape, color, taste, smell and___of that fruit. All these things are associated in your memory with the word “apple”___An example could be when you think about a lecture you have had. This could trigger a memory about what you’re talking about through that lecture, which can then trigger another memory___An example given on a website I was looking at follows: Do you remember the shape of Austria, Canada, Belgium, or Germany? Probably not. What about Italy, though? ___ You made an association with something already known the shape of a boot, and Italy’s shape could not be forgotten once you had made the association.
The ancient Greeks developed basic memory systems called mnemonics. The name is___from their Goddess of memory “Mnemosyne”. In the ancient world, a trained memory was an___ asset, particularly in public life. There were no___devices for taking notes, and early Greek orators(演說家) delivered long speeches with great___because they learned the speeches using mnemonic systems. The Greeks discovered that human memory is___ an associative process—that it works by linking things together. For example, think of an apple. The ___ your brain registers the word “apple”, it ___ the shape, color, taste, smell and___of that fruit. All these things are associated in your memory with the word “apple”___An example could be when you think about a lecture you have had. This could trigger a memory about what you’re talking about through that lecture, which can then trigger another memory___An example given on a website I was looking at follows: Do you remember the shape of Austria, Canada, Belgium, or Germany? Probably not. What about Italy, though? ___ You made an association with something already known the shape of a boot, and Italy’s shape could not be forgotten once you had made the association.
derived
immense
convenient
accuracy
largely
instinct
recalls
texture
This means that any thought about a certain subject will often bring up more memories that are related to it.
The associations do not have to be logical. They just have to make a good link
If you remember the shape of Italy, it is because you have been told sometime that Italy is shaped like a boot。