已选分类
文学
单选题The performance of the English Team was very ______. They played much worse than expected.
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单选题The plane ______ at 7: 00 p. m., so I have to be at the airport by 6 : 40 at the latest.A. has leftB. is to leaveC. will have leftD. leaves
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The economy in the United States is
heavily dependent on aluminum, a material widely used in the construction of
buildings and in making such diverse things as cars, airplanes, and food
containers. In 1979 Americans used over five million tons of new aluminum, and
one and a half million tons of recycled aluminum. Some ninety percent of the
bauxite (矾土) ore from which new aluminum is normally derived had to be imported,
to meet the demand. Poorer ores are abundant in the United States, however, and
researchers at Purdue University may recently have found a way to obtain
aluminum magnetically from these. Although aluminum is not
attracted by ordinary magnets, under special conditions it becomes temporarily
"paramagnetic", or very weakly responsive to a magnetic field. This is achieved
by immersing ore particles in water to which certain salts have been added and
then filtering the ore through steel wool in the presence of a strong magnetic
field. It is hoped that this technique will reduce the amount of high-grade
aluminum the United States must import.
单选题They are busy ______ in their lessons before the exam.
单选题Buffett distinguishes himself for ______.
单选题 阅读下列短文,然后根据短文的内容从每小题的四个选择项中,选出最佳的一项。{{B}}A{{/B}}
Our house was the oldest in the
village. It was nearly three hundred years old. Although we were six children,
and a mother and a father, we were not by any means alone in the house. We were
sharing it with big families of mice and spiders(蜘蛛). There were great-
grandparents, grandparents, fathers and mothers, and hundreds of mouse and
spider children. My mother would never let us kill a spider, not
even a hairy old grandfather. "If you want to live and rich," she used to say,
"let a spider run alive." And so the spiders, our enemies, were beaten and
kicked but never killed. But she had no such dealing with the mice.
One of our problems was that my mother hated cats; and we never owned a
single cat. We kept dogs, often two or three at the same time, but very few dogs
can move fast enough to catch a lively young mouse. Every night we set a dozen
mousetraps(捕鼠器), each with a small piece of cheese. Sometimes the cheese
disappeared, but the mice usually seemed too wise to go near the traps. We
seldom caught anything. My mother herself had far better luck.
Her arms and hands moved as fast as any cat's paws. Often, when she was
scrubbing or polishing a floor on her hands and knees, some foolish little grey
fellow would try to run past her. He never got very far. Quick as lightning her
hard hands would smack(用掌击) together--and there on the floor would be one dead
mouse. "Oh, you were a proud one," she would say to it then. One
day my father decided to clean out the water tank, which stood on four iron legs
in a corner upstairs. He was soon sorry that he had started the job. In the mud
at the bottom of the tank, there were sixteen of the little grey fellows, all as
solid and hard as stones. We had been drinking the water from that tank for
twelve years.
单选题 Languages are remarkably complex and wonderfully
complicated organs of culture. They contain the quickest and
the most efficient means of communicating within their respective culture. To
learn a foreign language is to learn another culture. In the words of a
poet and philosopher, "As many languages as one speaks, so many lives one lives.
" A culture and its language are as necessary as brain and body; while one is a
part of the oth- er, neither can function without the other. In learning a
foreign language, the best begin- ning would be starting with the non-language
elements of the language: its gestures, its body language, etc. Eye
contact is extremely important in English. Direct eye contact leads to
understanding, or, as the English saying goes, seeing eye-to-eye. We can
never see eye-to-eye with a native speaker of English until we have learned to
look directly into his eyes.
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单选题According to Paragraph 2 ______.
单选题"How long have you worked on the farm?" "( )the end of last year.
单选题From this passage we know that _________.
单选题{{B}}Text 2{{/B}}
Swimmers can drown in busy swimming
pools when lifeguards fail to notice that they are in trouble. The Royal Society
for the Prevention of Accidents says that on average 15 people drown in British
pools each year, but many more suffer major injury after getting into
difficulties. Now a French company has developed an artificial intelligence
system called Poseidon that sounds the alarm when it sees someone in danger of
drowning. When a swimmer sinks towards the bottom of the pool,
the new system sends an alarm signal to a poolside monitoring station and a
lifeguard's pager. In trials at a pool in Ancenis, near Nantes, it saved a life
within just a few months, says Alistair McQuade, a spokesman for its
manufacturer, Poseidon Technologies. Poseidon keeps watch
through a network of underwater and overhead video cameras. AI software analyses
the images to work out swimmers, trajectories. To do this reliably, it has to
tell the difference between a swimmer and the shadow of someone being cast onto
the bottom or side of the pool. "The underwater environment is a very dynamic
one, with many shadows and reflections dancing around." Says McQuade.
The software does this by "projecting" a shape in its field of view onto
an image on the far wall of the pool. It does the same with an image from
another camera viewing the shape from a different angle. If the two projections
are in the same position, the shape is identified as a shadow and is ignored.
But if they are different, the shape is a swimmer and so the system follows its
trajectory. To pick out potential drowning victims, anyone in
the water who starts to descend slowly is added to the software's "pre-alert"
list, says McQuade. Swimmers who then stay immobile on the pool bottom for 5
seconds or more are considered in danger of drowning. Poseidon double-checks
that the image really is of a swimmer, not a shadow, by seeing whether it
obscures the pool's floor texture when viewed from overhead. If so, it alerts
the lifeguard, showing the swimmer's location on a poolside screen.
The first full-scale Poseid6n system will be officially opened next week
at a pool in High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire. One man who is impressed with the
idea is Travor Baylis, inventor of the clockwork radio. Baylis runs a company
that installs swimming pools—and he was once an underwater escapologist with a
circus. "I say full marks to them if this works and can save lives," he says.
But he adds that any local authority spending £30,000— plus on a Poseidon system
ought to be investing similar amounts in teaching children to
swim.
单选题In the author's eyes "intellectuals" are those who ______.
单选题A.他们在辩论中表现非常出色,我们很难不佩服他们。B.如果你想申请一份学生签证,你就必须填写1M2A表格,你可以在最近的提供签证服务的英国领事馆免费获得该表格。C. 医院内,在可能干扰设备使用的任何区域,禁止使用手机。D. 众所周知,我们的许多问题一一事实上是所有的问题,从代沟、高离婚率到某些精神疾病一一至少部分是由于没有能够交流思想引起的。
单选题It is said that in England death is pressing, in Canada inevitable and in California optional. Small wonder. Americans" life expectancy has nearly doubled over the past century. Failing hips can be replaced, clinical depression controlled, cataracts removed in a 30-minute surgical procedure. Such advances offer the aging population a quality of life that was unimaginable when I entered medicine 50 years ago. But not even a great health-care system can cure death—and our failure to confront that reality now threatens this greatness of ours. Death is normal; we are genetically programmed to disintegrate and perish, even under ideal conditions. We all understand that at some level, yet as medical consumers we treat death as a problem to be solved. Shielded by third-party payers from the cost of our care, we demand everything that can possibly be done for us, even if it" s useless. The most obvious example is late-stage cancer care. Physicians frustrated by their inability to cure the disease and fearing loss of hope in the patient—too often offer aggressive treatment far beyond what is scientifically justified. In 1950, the U. S. spent 0.7 billion on health care. In 2002, the cost will be billion. Anyone can see this trend is unsustainable. Yet few seem willing to try to reverse it. Some scholars conclude that a government with finite resources should simply stop paying for medical care that sustains life beyond a certain age—say 83 or so. Former Colorado governor Richard Lamm has been quoted as saying that the old and infirm "have a duty to die and get out of the way" , so that younger, heallhier people can realize their potential. I would not go that far. Energetic people now routinely work through their 60s and beyond, and remain dazzlingly productive. At 78, Viacom chairman Sumner Redstone- jokingly claims to be 53. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O" Connor is in her 70s, and former surgeon general C. Everett Koop chairs an Internet start-up in his 80s. These leaders are living proof that prevention works and that we can manage the health problems that come naturally with age. As a mere 68-year-old, I wish to age as productively as they have. Yet there are limits to what a society can spend in this pursuit. As a physician, I know the most costly and dramatic measures may be ineffective and painful. I also know that people in Japan and Sweden, countries that spend far less on medical care, have achieved longer, healthier lives than we have. As a nation, we may be overfunding the quest for unlikely cures while underfunding research on humbler therapies that could improve people" s lives.
单选题The development of e-commerce may well bring the world into a brand new era of "electronic currency". At the moment, (52) areas in Europe, the United States and Asia have already started studying the possibility of an electronic currency. Electronic currency is not only about currency. It (53) to an entire finance system on the Net. It includes a virtual numeric currency, an electronic system of withdrawals, transfers and loans, and (54) cards of all shapes and sizes. The (55) of an electronic currency system implies the emergence of "virtual banks" and "virtual enterprises". Actually, the first virtual bank appeared in the US in 1995. (56) it is a small and insignificant bank, it represents the trend of the future. In time to come, we may even have to (57) the familiar paper currency. As the Net pushes the economy (58) rapidly, the economy is also bringing the Net market forward, resulting in the Internet itself becoming the world's largest emerging market. Of course, this is just the beginning. Although there are many companies which made huge profits (59) in the Internet market, they tend to be small companies. To date, most companies are making losses. The competition in the knowledge-based economy will also be more (60) This will definitely promote (61) and more efficient cooperation.
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单选题Of all the truths that this generation of Americans hold self-evident, few are more deeply embedded in the national psyche than the maxim "It pays to go to collage." Since the Gl Bill transformed higher education in the aftermath of W. W. II, a college diploma, once a birthright of the leisured few, has become a lodestone for the upwardly mobile, as integral to the American dream as the pursuit of happiness itself. The numbers tell the story: In 1950s, 43% of high-school graduates went on to pursue some form of higher education; at the same time, only 6% of Americans were college graduates. But by 1992, almost 2 to out of 3 secondary-school graduates were opting for higher education—and 21% of a much larger U.S. population had college diplomas. As Prof. Herbert London of New York University told a commencement audience last June: "The college experience has gone from a rite passage to a right of passage." However, as the class of 1993 is so painfully discovering, while a college diploma remains a requisite credential for ascending the economic ladder, it no longer guarantees the good life. Rarely since the end of the Great Depression has the job outlook for college graduates appeared so bleak: of the 1.1 million students who received their baccalaureate degrees last spring, fewer than 20% had lined up full-time employment by commencement. Indeed, an uncertain job market has precipitated a wave of economic fear and trembling among the young. "Many of my classmates are absolutely terrified," says one of the fortunate few who did manage to land a permanent position. "They wonder if they'll ever find a job." Some of this recession-induced anxiety will dissipate if a recovery finally begins to generate jobs at what economists consider a normal rate. But the sad fact is that for the foreseeable future, college graduates will be in considerable surplus, enabling employers to require a degree even for jobs for which a college education is really unnecessary. According to Kristina Shelley of the Bureau of Labor Statistics—who bases her estimate on a "moderate projection" of current trends—30 percent of college graduates entering the labor force between now and the year 2005 will be unemployed or will find employment in jobs for which they will be overqualified, joining what economists call the "educationally underutilized". Indeed, it may be quite a while—if ever—before those working temporarily as cocktail waitresses or taxi drivers will be able to pursue their primary career paths. Of course waiting on tables and bustling cab fares are respectable ways to earn a living. But they are not quite what so many young Americans—and their parents—had in mind as the end product of four expensive years in college.
