字母可以表示数,a是( ) A.正数 B.负数 C.既可以是正数也可以是负数 D

题型:选择题

问题:

字母可以表示数,a是(  )

A.正数

B.负数

C.既可以是正数也可以是负数

D.任意数

考点:用字母表示数
题型:选择题

对于()等检验项目,宜选用考虑合格质量水平的生产方风险和使用方风险的斗次或二次抽样方案,也可选用经实践检验有效的抽样方案。

A、重要、关键

B、一般、次要

C、构件截面尺寸或外观质量

D、材料、工艺

题型:选择题

【课题名称】《月之故乡》

一、教学目标

(一)情感、态度与价值观目标学习歌曲《月之故乡》,体会并表现歌曲所表达的深切的思乡之情。

(二)过程与方法目标通过听、辨、感等活动,丰富学生的情感体验,让学生更好地理解音乐,感受音乐,体验音乐所表达的情感与内涵。

(三)知识与技能目标能够用自然圆润的声音演唱《月之故乡》,知道这是~首多段体的歌曲,能够在甄别相似乐句的异同点中准确演唱并记忆歌曲。

二、教学重点能够在甄别相似乐句的异同点中准确演唱并记忆歌曲。

三、教学难点旋律中5、6小节与13、14小节的区别。

四、教学工具音乐教室、多媒体、音乐教学课件、钢琴。

五、教学过程

(一)常规发声,声音铺垫

(1)师生问好。

(2)发声练习。

(二)导入新课,激发情感导语:在这美丽的金秋十月,很高兴和同学们一起来完成这节音乐课的学习。提到“秋”,我们刚刚过完了一个和“秋”有关的节日,还记得是哪个节日吗?(中秋节)中秋节又叫团圆节,你们在这个节日里都与你的家人团聚了吗?有一位老人,59年没有在家乡过中秋节了,他思念自己的家乡,就写了一首诗叫《月之故乡》,有作曲家把这首诗谱上了曲,就变成了一首歌。现在,老师就为同学们来演唱这首歌曲,让我们来听一听这位诗人是如何思念他的家乡的。

教师演唱--《月之故乡》。

板书课题《月之故乡》。

(三)学习歌曲,挖掘情感

(1)出示歌曲《月之故乡》曲谱,请学生观察歌曲的结构。

(2)学唱第一乐段曲谱。

(3)出示第二段曲谱,与第一段作比较。

①比较节奏。

②比较旋律。

③视唱前两段乐谱。

(4)出示第三段曲谱,与第一段作比较。

①比较旋律。

②比较节奏。

③视唱前三段乐谱。

(5)出示第四段乐谱,与第一段作比较。

①比较旋律:有所不同。

②视唱第四段乐谱。

③视唱整首乐谱。

④提示注意每一乐段的相同与不同之处。

(6)出示歌词,再次听范唱。

(7)在教师的钢琴伴奏下演唱歌词。

(四)理解歌曲,抒发情感

(1)介绍词作者彭邦正彭邦正(1919-2003年),20世纪闻名海峡两岸与大洋彼岸的诗人,也是一位心系故土的爱国游子。他以《诗玫瑰的花圈》代唱战歌、以《花叫》代唱建设、以《月之故乡》代唱祖国统一、以《梦?致花神之诗》代唱爱心……归乡的夙愿一直魂牵梦萦于其晚年。但由于健康状况,直到辞世,这位阔别故乡59年的海外华文诗坛巨匠,才终于实现了他毕生最大的夙愿--魂归故里,落叶归根。

(2)再次演唱歌曲《月之故乡》。

(五)总结提高,升华情感

(1)播放《乡愁》视频。

(2)再次演唱歌曲《月之故乡》。

题型:选择题

关于外阴白色病变,哪项正确()

A.外阴营养不良的外阴组织中发现有神经血管营养失调

B.其病理变化之一为硬化苔癣型营养不良

C.硬化性苔癣型营养不良可能与局部潮湿和对外来刺激反应过度有关

D.增生型营养不良可能与遗传、免疫或性激素有关

E.在硬化性苔癣型营养不良的基础上有继发癌变的危险

题型:选择题

患者男,62岁,近3个月逐渐出现上腹部不适,进食后饱胀,嗳气,纤维胃镜发现大弯侧胃壁上有1cm大小块状肿物,与周围组织界限不清,病理回报为恶性。该肿瘤Borrmann分型为()。

A.Ⅰ型

B.Ⅱ型

C.Ⅲ型

D.Ⅳ型

E.Ⅴ型

题型:选择题

Vilhelm Hammershoi has been a well-kept secret since his death in 1916. All his best- known paintings are of household interiors that are drained of color and tell no stories. 46. His windows cannot be seen through, his doors cannot be opened and the figures produce no element of vitality into the rooms. Hammershoi is defiantly inscrutable; the mood is melancholic and enigmatic, but the paintings are oddly compelling. Quite why, no one seems sure.

Of the 71 paintings in a new exhibition in London, 21 come from his native Copenhagen, 15 from other Scandinavian collections and 20 from private collections, principally Danish. Hammershoi’s focus was not as narrow as this show might suggest, but to see his nudes it is necessary to visit the Statens Museum for Kunst in Denmark. He did some fine, if bleak, landscapes too, but it was the interiors that sold in his lifetime, and he is best remembered for paintings of the sun shining through curtainless window-panes, casting shadows on carpetless floors. 47.Anxious to transform the prosaic into the romantic, his admirers speak of a poet of light and the poetry of silence.

Hammershoi himself was guileless. 48."What makes me choose a motif are the lines, what I like to call the architectural context of an image," he said in 1907. Light was also very important, but it was lines, he insisted, that had the greatest significance for him. His wife, Ida, makes appearances in the empty rooms, but she is usually painted from the back, with the emphasis on the bare nape of her neck. The heroic figures are white doors and windows, and tables, chairs, a piano and a sofa. No painter can have got so much pleasure from painting brown furniture. One work, titled "Interior with a Woman at a Sewing Table", is a symphony of three shades of shiny brown.

Hammershoi was influenced by Vermeer and the 17th-century Dutch genre painters and by Caspar David Friedrich, a German, but there is no one like him. His work shows traces of an unexpected subversive sense of humor. 49.Felix Kramer, the show’s curator, identifies irregularities, for example, that create an almost surreal quality: a piano with two legs, table legs casting shadows in different directions, chests of drawers with no knobs or handles. Even some of Hammershoi’s admirers wonder what it all means.

50.Trying to pin Hammershoi down is as profitless as Waiting for Godot. However, the new exhibition at the Royal Academy of Arts might encourage some excitement in the marketplace. The highest price made by a Hammershoi interior is £ 520,000 ($1 million) in 2006 and the price boom in the auction houses is passing him by. Perhaps the secret of Hammershoi has been kept a bit too well.

46.His windows cannot be seen through, his doors cannot be opened and the figures produce no element of vitality into the rooms.

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