已选分类
文学
填空题
填空题Wanted
××× Foreign Language Institute is a foreign language studying institute. Now we are seeking for two English teachers.
Qualifications:
·With a master degree in English (either linguistics or literature)
·Proficiency in English and a good command of his/her major
·Deep love for teaching profession
·Ability to teach literature, linguistics and other courses for senior classes
·Good at using a computer and using Photoshop
Qualified applicants will have interviews and tests. If interested, please send an application letter and detailed resume in Chinese and English, a recent photo and a copy of diploma. Those interested please contact Li Ming, the personnel director.
Mailing address: Personnel Section ××× Foreign Language Institute
Postcode: 123456
Tel. No.: 87654321
填空题Business and government leaders consider the inflation rate to be an important general indicator. Inflation is a period of increased spending that causes rapid rises in prices. When your money buys fewer goods so that you get (51) for the same amount of money as before, inflation is the problem. There is a general rise (52) the prices of goods and services. Your money buys less. Sometimes people describe inflation as a time when "a dollar is not worth a dollar anymore". Inflation is a problem for all consumers. People who live on a fixed income are hurt the best. Retired people, for instance, can not count (53) an increase in income as prices rise. Elderly people who do not work face serious problems in stretching their incomes to (54) their needs in time of inflation. Retirement income or any fixed income usually does not rise as fast as prices. Many retired people must cut their spending to keep up with rising prices. In many cases they must stop (55) some necessary items, such as food and clothing. Even for working people whose incomes are going up, inflation can be a problem. The cost of living goes. (56) , too. People who work must have even more money to keep up their standard of living. Just buying the things they need costs more. When incomes do not keep pace with (57) prices, the standard of living goes down. People may be earning the same (58) of money, but they are not living as well because they are not able to buy as many goods and services. Government units gather information about prices in our economy and publish it as price indexes from (59) the rate of change can be determined. A price index measures changes in prices using the price for a given year as the base. The base price is set at 100, and the other prices are reported as a percentage of the base price. A price index makes (60) possible to compare current prices of typical consumer goods, for example, with prices of the same goods in previous year.
填空题Yellowstone National Park is
one of
the
older
parks in the U.S.. It was
established
by Congress
in 1872.
A. one of
B. older
C. established
D. by Congress
填空题{{U}}Having been{{/U}} robbed {{U}}off{{/U}} economic importance, those states are {{U}}not{{/U}} likely to count for {{U}}very much{{/U}} in international political terms.
A. Having been B. off C. not D. very much
填空题Your frank ______ (critisize) of his attempts annoyed him.
填空题Loading port is also ______ the port of delivery. It is the place to start the shipment,as well as the place to have the expotts delivered.
填空题[A] Running after Them Doesn't Help Anybody [B] Remember Newton's Third Law [C] Show Some Respect for the Things They Care About [D] 18 Years Old:The Beginning of Adulthood [E] Know Strength and Weakness of Your Child [F] Don't Look Under the Mattress [G] Be Consistent When your child becomes a teenager, you're well over halfway through the job of raising them, and you have only a few years left to instill all those values and principles you want them to go into adult life with. And suddenly, they look as if they're throwing away all the work you've put in up to now. But actually, if you just keep your head, and follow these essential teenage Rules, you'll find you come out the other end with a terrific adult you can really be proud of. 41.______ Unless your child is putting themselves in serious danger, you really do have to put up with it. The more you try to tell them, the more you push them in the opposite direction. They're looking for something to kick at, to rebel against, because they're programmed to. The more force you use, the more they'll use. Remember Newton's third law of motion? For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. So what can you do when you see them going wrong? You can tell them what you think, but don't tell them what to do. 42.______ Teenagers are up to things you don't want to know about. For example, your daughter has gone further than you'd like with her boyfriend. And they've almost certainly been offered drugs, but they won't have any evidence of it hanging around in their room, so there's no point looking under the mattress or reading their secret diary. And what are you going to do about it — confront them? I think not. You'll severely damage your relationship, and they'll just keep them under the floorboards instead. Maybe you should think back to the things you did as a teenager that you didn't want your parents to know about. See? Your kids are just being perfectly normal teenagers. 43. ______ It's one of the many paradoxes of teenagers. On the one hand, they want to rebel, to shock you, to do things that get to you, and on the other hand, they want your approval and your goodwill. So when you criticize your teenager's choices, you criticize them. It's an age of fragile egos and easily knocked self-esteem, and it's easy to make your teenager feel that you disapprove, or even that you don't like them. Whether it's their music or their politics or the way they dress or their decision to become vegetarian, they need to know that it's okay with you. 44.______ You started off with 18 years and counting. How many have you got left? Because when you get to zero, they'll be on their own. I know parents who are still looking after their kids when they're 18. And the kids, not being crazy, let them do it. It takes two to play that game. You know your child's strengths and weaknesses as well as anyone. So think through what they still need to learn, and make sure they do. If they're hopeless with money, teach them to budget. Get them to do the family shopping for a week on your usual budget, or get firm about not paying to fill up their car beyond the agreed amount. 45. ______ Your kids need to know what is and isn't acceptable. And they judge that by what was and wasn't okay yesterday and the day before. If they're not getting a consistent message, they're clueless as to how they have to behave, and those all important boundaries aren't being properly maintained. That means the kids feel confused, insecure, and perhaps even unloved. If you've decided that you don't allow the kids to stay late outside, you have to stick to it. Just because your little one was a bit sad about something today, and you're feeling a bit down yourself anyway... no, no, no ! Stop right there ! Let them come back at once and it will be ten times harder to say no to them next time, and they won't understand why. Say no now and you're only being cruel to be kind.
填空题{{B}}Passage 1{{/B}}
Energy use and air pollution have been synonymous in China for
decades, especially in urban areas.{{U}} (66) {{/U}}Fifteen or 20 years
ago in China's northern cities, such as Shenyang, air pollution was
characterized by decreased visibility caused by high levels of particulates and
sulfur dioxide (SO2). Although conditions have improved in modern
cities, such as Beijing and Shanghai, China still has three of the ten most
polluted cities in the world and hundreds of cities that are not in compliance
with the World Health Organization (WHO) air quality guidelines.
{{U}} (67) {{/U}}More than 120 cities have populations of more
than one million, and by the end of the twenty-first century, 10 to 20 cities
will have populations of more than 10 million. Rapid urbanization will challenge
governments at all levels, not only to provide basic services to growing urban
populations, but also to modernize, to continue to develop economically, and to
address environmental concerns, particularly air pollution, that result from
rapid economic growth. Chinese planners now recognize that the
choice of energy supply affects not only public health, but also land use, the
environment, infrastructure, services, and economic growth.{{U}} (68)
{{/U}}Because China has an overabundance of coal and a scarcity of oil and
gas, planners must continually balance the public good (i. e. , public health
and quality of life) against the easy availability of polluting coal and the
high cost of importing oil and natural gas. Fundamentally, the Chinese policy
community must address ambient air quality concerns by integrating energy supply
and use for all economic sectors--industrial, power generation, residential,
commercial, and transportation. {{U}} (69) {{/U}}The
national averages for emissions of SO2 and particulate matter (PM)
have decreased, mostly as a result of stepped up enforcement of existing
standards by national, provincial, and municipal governments. However, because
of the increase in vehicle pollution and the continued prevalence of
fine-particle pollution, the government passed a second amendment in 2000 to the
1987 Law of Air Pollution Prevention and Control.{{U}} (70) {{/U}}When
the new law is fully implemented over the next decade, it will greatly
strengthen environmental laws and standards. A. Thus, a secure,
flexible, and varied energy-supply policy is critical to continued
growth. B. The new legislation, which went into effect September
1, 2001, calls for the regulation of transportation, as well as residential and
commercial energy use. C. In rural areas, air pollution is also
common because a significant amount of industry that is highly dependent on coal
is located in the countryside. D. China is undergoing
urbanization and industrial development on an unprecedented scale.
E. This may be because vehicles in Beijing tend to be new and have fairly
efficient combustion systems. F. A good deal of progress has
been made in China since the mid-1990s.
填空题And all this praise is just because the poor man has died—doesnt strike you as______ (sincere)
填空题
填空题The law
I am referring to
requires that everyone
who
owns
a car
has
accident insurance.
填空题Assign a different color ______ each different type of information.
填空题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} In the following article, some sentences
have been removed. For Questions 41 - 45, choose the most suitable one from the
list A-- G to fit into each of the numbered blank. There are two extra
choices, which do not fir in any of the blanks. Mark your answers on Answer
Sheet I.
Anyone paying attention to the debate over Social Security has
heard a litany of dates. There's 2018, when the program is expected to start
taking in less in taxes than it pays out in benefits. And there's 2042 (or 2052
by some estimates), when its trust fund is supposed to run out of
money. (41)___________________ For years, the
government has collected more in Social Security taxes than it needed to pay
current benefits, Those excess collections are credited to the Social Security
Trust Fund, ostensibly to pay future retirees. But there is no actual
money in the fund. Instead, the government spends the money for
other purposes and issues the fund IOUs. In 2009, the shell game
begins to end. The amount by which Social Security taxes exceed benefits starts
to shrink. (42)___________________ The problem could have been
avoided, and it still could be reduced. If the rest of the
budget was in good shape--and particularly if the government bad staved on the
path it was on five years ago of buying down the national debt--lawmakers could
simply re-borrow the money to pay benefits. They could have a leisurely
debate over what, if anything, else to do.
(43)___________________ This raises a question: If the
biggest immediate problem of Social Security is that it will soon make the
deficit worse, wouldn't it be better to address the underlying deficit? In other
words--as the Bush administration embarks on a 60 day, 60 stop tour to
promote Social Security overhaul--are we really debating the right
problem? (44)___________________ The money that
has been borrowed, or is projeced to be borrowed, in Fresident Bush's two terms
alone would come close to solving Social Security's solvency problems for at
least the next 75 years. The Office of Management and Budget projects
cumulative borrowing of $2. 6 trillion. The Social Security Administration
estimates that $3.7 trillion would shore up the program until at least
2080. (45)___________________. Exploding Medicare and Medicaid
costs, the loss of revenue because of the recent tax cuts and likely changes in
the alternative minimum tax (AMT) present a bleak outlook over the next 10
years. Making the Bush tax cuts permanent and fixing the AMT could lead to
deficits of about $650 billion to $750 billion by the middle of the next
decade. A. By 2018--sooner, if private accounts are created--the
flow reverses. Instead of spending a surplus, the government will need to begin
paying off its IOUs. Absent large tax hikes or spending cuts, already
astronomical deficits will skyrocket. B. The bottom line is that
Washington, through profligate borrowing and policies that lock in red ink for
years to come, is passing the burden to future generations. ,And the problem is
getting worse. C. But the most important date will arrive sooner
in 2009. That's when the cost of paying benefits to the first wave
of retiring baby boomers will begin exposing the accounting gimmickry that is
the true driver of the Social Security "crisis." To the extent a crisis exists,
it is not really about Social Security. It is about decades of irresponsible
budgeting that threatens future retirees. D. As bad as the
current record deficits look ($427 billion this year alone), they likely will
get worse in the next decade as the result of fiscal time bombs hard-wired into
government spending and tax plans. E. Left unchecked, chronic
deficits will more than offset any good that comes out of Social Security
reform. Deficits make the government more beholden to its creditors, many
of them foreign. As the national debt surges, so does the portion of the budget
dedicated to paying interest on that debt. F. But that is not an
option given the dire budgetary situation. Social Security will soon
become a drain on a government already under tremendous fiscal stress. It's the
difference between having a zero balance on your credit card and being at your
credit limit. If you're maxed out, you lose the flexibility to take on new debt
to deal with an expense. G. This is not to say Social Security
reform--with or without the private accounts proposed by Bush --is not
worthwhile. But it is only one of many necessary steps to put the nation on a
sound fiscal footing and ensure that future generations will have a reasonably
comfortable retirement.
填空题
填空题
填空题Most bosses who assess subordinates see appraisals as an effective way to improve employees work per______.
填空题Fred: Do you like a cup of coffee or tea?Jane: ____________
填空题I
enjoy
eating in
good
restaurants and
to go
to the theater
afterwards
.
A. enjoy B. good C. to go D. afterwards
填空题{{U}}Now that they are all here{{/U}}, let us start the discussion.
