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文学
单选题All ______ is a steady supply of water to the farmland. A. which needs B. that is needed C. the thing is needed D. need
单选题Passage Five There are many commonly held beliefs about eyeglasses and eyesight that are not proven facts. For instance, some people believe that wearing glasses too soon weakens the eyes. But there is no evidence to show that the structure of eyes is changed by wearing glasses at a young age. Wearing the wrong glasses, however, can prove harmful. Studies show that for adults there is no danger, but children can develop loss of vision if they have the wrong glasses. We have all heard some of the common myths about how eyesight gets bad. Most people believe that reading in dim light causes pool eyesight, but that is unique. Too little light makes the eyes work harder, so they do get tired and strained. Eyestrain also results from reading a lot, reading in bed, and watching too much television. But, although eyestrain may cause some pain or headaches, it does not permanently damage eyesight. Another myth about eyes is that they can be replaced, or transferred from one person to another. There are close to one million nerve fibers that connect the eyeball to the blain, and as if yet it is impossible to attach them all in a new person. Only certain parts of the eye--the cornea and the retina-- can be replaced. But if We keep clearing up the myths and learning more about the eyes, someday a full transplant may be possible!
单选题______belongs to "stream of consciousness" school.
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单选题______ , their use is impossible in many inland places.
单选题{{B}}Passage One{{/B}}
The concept of personal choice in
relation to health behaviors is an important one. An estimated 90 percent of all
illnesses may be preventable if individuals would make sound personal health
choice based upon current medical knowledge. We all enjoy our freedom of choice
and do not like to see it restricted when it is within the legal and moral
boundaries of society. The structure of American society allows us to make
almost all our own personal decisions that may concern our health. If we so
desire, we can smoke, drink excessively, refuse to wear seat belts, eat whatever
foods we want, and live a completely sedentary life-style without any exercise.
The freedom to make much personal decision is a fundamental aspect of our
society, although the wisdom of these decisions can be questioned. Personal
choices relative to health often cause a difficulty. As one example, a teenager
may know the facts relative to smoking cigarettes and health but may be
pressured by friends into believing it is the socially accepted thing to
do. A multitude of factors, both inherited and environmental,
influence the development of health-related behaviors, and it is beyond the
scope of this text to discuss all these factors as they may affect any given
individual. However, the decision to adopt a particular health-related behavior
is usually one of personal choice. There are healthy choices and there are
unhealthy choices. In discussing the morals of personal choice, Fries and Crapo
drew a comparison. They suggest that to knowingly give oneself over to a
behavior that has a statistical probability of shortening life is similar to
attempting suicide. Thus, for those individuals who are interested in preserving
both the quality and quantity of life, personal health choices should reflect
those behaviors that are associated with a statistical probability of increased
vitality and longevity.
单选题The leader of the expedition ______ everyone to follow his example. [A] promoted [B] reinforced [C] sparked [D] inspired
单选题Which of the following is NOT included in G. Leech's seven types of meaning? A. Connotative meaning. B. Denotative meaning. C. Conceptual meaning.
单选题The swine flu will probably return in force earlier than seasonal flu usually begins, federal health officials predicted Friday, saying they expected it to erupt as soon as schools open rather than in October or November. The swine flu is still circulating in the United States, especially in summer camps, even though hot weather has arrived and the regular flu season ended months ago, "so we expect challenges when people return to school, when kids are congregating together," Dr. Anne Schuchat, director of respiratory diseases at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said in a telephone news conference held jointly with vaccine experts from the Food and Drug Administration and the Department of Health and Human Services. It is still unclear how many doses of a swine flu vaccine will be available by then, and officials have been reluctant to make firm predictions beyond saying that they expect tens of millions, rather than hundreds of millions, and they plan to distribute them to people who are the most vulnerable, like pregnant women and people who are the most likely to encounter the flu, like health care workers. The number of doses available will depend on how fast seed strains grow, how much protection a small dose provides, and whether immune-system boosters called adjuvants are needed and prove to be safe; adjuvants are not used in American flu vaccines now. Clinical trials testing those questions are expected to take another couple of months, said Dr. Jesse L. Goodman, director of the F. D.A.'s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research. Assuming a swine flu vaccination campaign begins, it will be voluntary, Dr. Schuchat emphasized, but she "strongly encouraged" pregnant women to get both a seasonal flu shot and a swine flu shot when they are available. The C.D.C.has been closely following the disease in the Southern Hemisphere winter, and it is mimicking the patterns seen in the United States and Mexico in the spring, she said. Most infections and most serious cases are in children and young adults, and those with underlying conditions, including pregnancy, are the most likely to die. Dr. Schuchat likened the spread's unpredictability to that of popcorn: one city could see an explosion of cases and overwhelmed hospitals while another saw few. Her most important message, she added, was that "the virus isn't gone, and we fully expect there will be challenges in the fall. /
单选题(2007)We are wanted______.
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单选题In the 1970s many of us thought working outside the home would be liberating for women, freeing them from financial dependence on men and allowing them roles beyond those of wife and mother. It hasn't worked out that way. Women's labor has been bought on the cheap, their working hours have become longer and their family commitments have barely diminished. The reality for most working women is a near impossible feat of working ever harder. There have been new opportunities for some women: professions once closed to them, such as law, have opened up. Women managers are commonplace, though the top boardrooms remain male preserves. Professional and managerial women have done well out of neoliberalism. Their salaries allow them to hire domestic help. But more women, such as the supermarket or call centre workers; the cooks, cleaners and hairdressers, all find themselves in low-wage, low-status jobs with no possibility of paying to have their houses cleaned by someone else. Even those in professions once-regarded as reasonably high-status, such as teaching, nursing or office work, have seen that status pushed down with longer hours, more regulation and lower pay. Women's right to work should not mean a family life where partners rarely see each other or their children. Yet a quarter of all families with dependent children have one parent working nights or evenings, many of them because of childcare problems. The legislative changes of the 1960s and 1970s helped establish women's legal and financial independence, but we have long come up against the limits of the law. A more radical social transformation would mean using the country's wealth—much of it now produced by women—to create a decent family life. A 35-hour week and a national childcare service would be a start. But it is hard to imagine the major employers conceding such demands. Every gain that women have made at work has had to be fought for. Women's lives have undergone a revolution over the past few decades that has seen married women, and mothers in particular, go from a private family role to a much more social role at work. But they haven't left the family role behind: now they are expected to work even harder to do both.
单选题{{B}}Part A{{/B}}{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} Read the following four
reacts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your
answers on Answer Sheet 1.{{B}}Text 1{{/B}}
The study of law has been recognized
for centuries as a basic intellectual discipline in European universities.
However, only in recent years has it become a feature of undergraduate
programs in English-Canadian universities. Traditionally, legal learning
has been viewed in such institutions as the special preserve of lawyers,
rather than a necessary part of the intellectual equipment of an educated
person. Happily, the older and more continental view of legal education is
establishing itself in a number of Canadian universities and some have even
begun to offer undergraduate degrees in law. If the study of law
is beginning to establish itself as part and parcel of a general education, its
aims and methods should appeal directly to journalism educators. Law is a
discipline which encourages responsible judgment. On the one hand, it
provides opportunities to analyze such ideas as justice, democracy and freedom.
On the other, it links these concepts to everyday realities in a manner
which is parallel to the links journalists forge on a daily basis as they cover
and comment on the news. For example, notions of evidence and fact, of
basic rights and public interest are at work in the process of journalistic
judgment and production just as in courts of law. Sharpening judgment by
absorbing and reflecting on law is a desirable component of a journalist's
intellectual preparation for his or her career. But the idea
that the journalist must understand the law more profoundly than an ordinary
citizen turns on an understanding of the established conventions and special
responsibilities of the news media. Politics or, more broadly, the
functioning of the state, is a major subject for journalists. The better
informed they are about the way the state works, the better their reporting will
be. In fact, it is difficult to see how journalists who do not have a clear
grasp of the basic features of the Canadian Constitution can do a competent job
on political stories. Furthermore, the legal system and the
events which occur within it are primary subjects for journalists. While the
quality of legal journalism varies greatly, there is an undue reliance amongst
many journalists on interpretations supplied to them by lawyers. While comment
and reaction from lawyers may enhance stories, it is preferable for journalists
to rely on their own notions of significance and make their own judgments.
These can only come from a well- grounded understanding of the legal
system.
单选题Are some people born clever and others born stupid? Or is intelligence developed by our environment and our experience? Strangely enough, the answer to these questions is yes. To some extent our intelligence is given to us at birth, and no amount of special education can make a genius out of a child born with low intelligence. On the other hand, a child who lives in a boring environment will develop his intelligence less than one who lives in rich and varied surroundings. Thus the limits of a person' s intelligence are fixed at birth, whether or not he reaches those limits will depend on his environment. This view, now held by most experts, can be supported in a number of ways. It is easy to show that intelligence is to some extent something we are born with. The closer the blood relationship between two people is, the closer they are likely to be in intelligence. Thus if we take two unrelated people at random from the population, it is likely that their degree of intelligence will be completely different. If, on the other hand, we take two identical twins, they will very likely be as intelligent as each other. Relations like brothers and sisters, parents and children, usually have similar intelligence, and this clearly suggests that intelligence depends on birth. Imagine now that we take two identical twins and put them in different environments. We might send one, for example, to a university and the other to a factory where the work is boring. We would soon find differences in their intelligence developing, and this indicates that environment as well as birth plays an important part. This conclusion is also suggested by the fact that people who live in close contact with each other, but who are not related at all are likely to have similar degree of intelligence.
单选题{{B}}B{{/B}}
The famous American gorilla (大猩猩)
expert Diane Fossey had a completely new way to study gorillas—she pretended to
be one of them. She copied their actions and way of life—eating plants and
getting down on her hands and knees to walk the way a gorilla does. It was a new
relationship. Diane Fossey was murdered in Rwanda in 1985 and
her story was made into the popular film Gorillas in the Mist. It was a long way
from King Kong, which is about a gorilla as a monster (a frightening animal),
and helped to show a new idea: the real monster is man, while the gorilla is to
be admired. Today there are thought to be around 48000 lowland
gorillas and maybe 400-450 mountain gorillas in the wild. From the Congo in West
Africa to Rwanda and Uganda further east, they are endangered by hunting and by
the cutting down of their forest homes. Some time ago, I found in
my letterbox a little magazine from the World Wide Fund for Nature. It had two
photos side by side. One was of a young gorilla. "This is a species of mammal
(哺乳类动物 ), "said the words below it. "It is being destroyed by man. We must save
it for our own good." The other photo showed a human baby. The words also read,
"This is a species of mammal, "but then went on: "It is the most destructive
(破坏性的) on earth. We must retrain it for its own
good."
单选题We can make mistakes at any age. Some mistakes we make are about money, but most mistakes are about people. "Did Jerry really care when I broke up with Helen? "" When I got that great job, did Jim really feel good about it, as a friend? Or did he envy my luck?"" And Paul—why didn't I pick up that he was friendly just because I had a car?" When we look back, doubts like these can make us feel bad. But when we look back, it's too late. Why do we go wrong about our friends or our enemies? Sometimes what people say hides their real meaning. And if we don't really listen, we miss the feeling behind the words. Suppose someone tells you, "You're a lucky dog." Is he really on your side? If he says, "You're a lucky guy. "or "You're a lucky gal." , that's being friendly. But "lucky dog"? There's a bit of envy in those words. Maybe he doesn't see it himself. But bringing in the" dog" bit puts you down a little. What he may be saying is that he doesn't think you deserve your luck. "Just think of all the things you have to be thankful for" is another noise that says one thing and means another. It could mean that the speaker is trying to get you to see your problem as part of your life as a whole. But is he? Wrapped up in this phrase is the thought that your problem isn't important. It's telling you to think of all the starving people in the world when you haven't got a date for Saturday night. How can you tell the real meaning behind someone's words? One way is to take a good look at the person talking. Do his words fit the way he looks? Does what he says square with the tone of voice? His posture? The look in his eyes? Stop and think. The minute you spend thinking about the real meaning of what people say to you may save another mistake.
单选题(2005)You cannot be_____careful.
单选题Our English teacher has ______ son.
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单选题Not too many decades ago it seemed "obvious" both to the general public and to sociologists that modern society has changed people's natural relations, loosened their responsibilities to kin (亲戚) and neighbors, and substituted in their place superficial relationships with passing acquaintances. However, in recent years a growing body of research has revealed that the "obviousness" is not true. It seems that if you are a city resident, you typically know a smaller proportion of your neighbors than you do if you are a resident of a smaller community. But, for the most part, this fact has few significant consequences. It does not necessarily follow that if you know few of your neighbors you will know no one else. Even in very large cities, people maintain close social ties within small, private social worlds. Indeed, the number and quality of meaningful relationships do not differ between more and less urban people. Small-town residents are more involved with kin than big-city residents. Yet city dwellers compensate by developing friendships with people who share similar interests and activities. Urbanism may produce a different style of life, but the quality of life does not differ between town and city. Nor are residents of large communities any likelier to display psychological symptoms of stress or alienation, a feeling of not belonging, than are residents of smaller communities. However, city dwellers do worry more about crime, and this leads them to a distrust of strangers. These findings do not imply that urbanism makes little or no difference. If neighbors are strangers to one another, they are less likely to sweep the sidewalk of an elderly couple living next door or keep an eye out for young troublemakers. Moreover, as Wirth suggested, there may be a link between a community's population size and its social heterogeneity (多样性). For instance, sociologists have found that the size of a community is associated with bad behavior including gambling, drugs, etc. Large-city urbanites are also more likely than their small-town counterparts to have a cosmopolitan (见多识广者的) outlook, to display less responsibility to traditional kinship roles, to vote for leftist political candidates, and to be tolerant of nontraditional religious groups, unpopular political groups, and so-called undesirables. Everything considered, heterogeneity and unusual behavior seem to be outcomes of large population size.
