English Language Tests-Intermediate level's archive
Science and marketing (1)
1. Gitte Meyer of the Copenhagen Business School notes
that during the past decades, swarms of scientists from a
wide range of fields have migrated from their and
descended onto the marketplace, adapting themselves to
marketing practices in the process.
ivory towers
leaning towers
towering infernos
towers of Babel
2. With surprising ease, science journalism seems to be
adapting too; penduling comfortably between old-
fashioned enlightenment, aimed at promoting science as a
, and PR exercises, aimed at selling science on
behalf of private interests.
common good
common ground
commonplace
commonwealth
3. This development provides for thought in more
than one sense.
food
grist
meal
meat
4. In one respect, it prompts a critical question regarding
conventional science journalism, marked by a lack of
clasp
fix
stick
8. Or should they acknowledge that to promote what is
seen, navely perhaps, but nevertheless as a general
benefit, is a far from selling the same thing, in much
the same way, on behalf of vested interests?
cry
shout
sight
view
9. The fundamental convention of science journalism is
the convention of science transmission; that is, the
that journalists should relate to science by way of
transporting scientific facts from scientists to a lay public
for consumption.
constriction
contradiction
prediction
prescription
10. The convention also contains the that journalists
should not interfere in any way with the scientific facts.
permutation
predilection
promulgation
proscription