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Blank-filling exercise: Many people persuade themselves that they cannot...



 
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He do not know anything? | Exercise: Catherine is ringing up a hotel to book a room. Complete the dialogue.
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Blank-filling exercise: Many people persuade themselves that they cannot... #1 (permalink) Fri Aug 08, 2008 8:00 am   Blank-filling exercise: Many people persuade themselves that they cannot...
 

Fill in the numbered blanks with one suitable words:
Many people persuade themselves that they cannot understand mechanical things, or that they have no head for figures. These convictions (1) them fell enclosed and safe, and (2) course save them a great (3) of trouble. But the reader who have a head for anything at (4) is pretty sure to have a head for whatever he really wants to put his mind (5). His interest, say (6) mathematics, has usually been killed (7) routine teaching, in exactly the (8)way that the literary interest of most scientists, and for (9) matter of most non-scientists, has been killed by the set book and the Shakespeare play. Few people would argue that (10) whose taste (11) poetry has not survived (12) examination syllabus are fundamentally insensitive (13) poetry. Yet, they cheerfully write (14) the large intellectual pleasures of science (15) if they belong only to minds (16) a special cast. Science is not a special sense. It is as wide as literal meaning (17) its name: knowledge. The notion of the specialised mind is, (18)comparison, (19) modern as the notion of the specialised man, 'the scientist', a word which is only (20) hundred years old.
Here is my answer to this exercise:
(1)make
(2)of
(3) deal
(4) first
(5) (I have no answer)
(6) (I have no answer)
(7)(I have no answer)
(8)(I have no answer)
(9)(I have no answer)
(10)(I have no answer)
(11)of
(12)(I have no answer)
(13)to
(14)for
(15)(I have no answer)
(16)for
(17)of
(18)in
(19)as
(20)(I have no answer)
Ngoanhquan
I'm new here and I like it ;-)


Joined: 28 Oct 2007
Posts: 14

Blank-filling exercise: Many people persuade themselves that they cannot... #2 (permalink) Fri Aug 08, 2008 8:32 am   Blank-filling exercise: Many people persuade themselves that they cannot...
 

Hi, Ngoanhquan

I'm afraid, unless you give it a shot and offer your own choices, the teachers won't help you
Please, try to fill in the blanks yourself first, and then they check your answers
Good luck ! :D
Lost_Soul
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Joined: 15 Sep 2006
Posts: 1861
Location: South Park, Colorado, USA

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Blank-filling exercise: Many people persuade themselves that they cannot... #3 (permalink) Fri Aug 08, 2008 20:25 pm   Blank-filling exercise: Many people persuade themselves that they cannot...
 

ngoanhquan wrote:
Fill in the numbered blanks with one suitable words:
Many people persuade themselves that they cannot understand mechanical things, or that they have no head for figures. These convictions (1) them fell enclosed and safe, and (2) course save them a great (3) of trouble. But the reader who have -- this should be "has" -- a head for anything at (4) is pretty sure to have a head for whatever he really wants to put his mind (5 to). His interest, say (6 in) mathematics, has usually been killed (7 by) routine teaching, in exactly the (8) same way that the literary interest of most scientists, and for (9 that) matter of most non-scientists, has been killed by the set book -- what is a "set book" -- and the Shakespearen play. Few people would argue that (10 those) whose taste (11) poetry has not survived (12) examination syllabus are fundamentally insensitive (13) poetry. Yet, they cheerfully write (14) the large intellectual pleasures of science (15) if they belong only to minds (16) a special cast. Science is not a special sense. It is as wide as literal meaning (17) its name: knowledge. The notion of the specialised mind is, (18)comparison, (19) modern as the notion of the specialised man, 'the scientist', a word which is only (20) hundred years old.
Here is my answer to this exercise:
(1)make -- perhaps, but I prefer "cause"
(2)of
(3) deal
(4) first -- try "all": anything at all
(5) (I have no answer)
(6) (I have no answer)
(7)(I have no answer)
(8)(I have no answer)
(9)(I have no answer)
(10)(I have no answer)
(11)of for
(12)(I have no answer) I don't either. What's an examination syllabus? It seems to want a "the" however.
(13)to
(14)for off - they "write off"
(15)(I have no answer) as if
(16)for "of" or "belonging to"
(17)of
(18)in or "by"
(19)as
(20)(I have no answer)

This text doesn't sound very natural to begin with.
Barb_D
I'm here quite often ;-)


Joined: 13 Jun 2008
Posts: 474

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He do not know anything? | Exercise: Catherine is ringing up a hotel to book a room. Complete the dialogue.
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