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文学
单选题The police were tracking the criminal who was said ______ in the forest. A. to have hidden B. to be hiding C. to hiding D. to hide
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单选题When she handed in her term paper late, Diane ______ a story that her computer had crashed. The truth is that she doesn't even use a computer.
单选题Regular child care provided outside home or by someone other than the mother does not in itself undermine(削弱) healthy emotional connections between mothers and their 15-month-old infants, according to a long-term national study. The finding holds even if care begins during the first 3 months after birth and runs for 30 hours or more per week. Among infants who receive unkind and unresponsive care from their mothers, however, the mother-child relationship may be damaged. "This research helps us put apart complexities regarding child care that have not previously been studied in detail." contends Jay Belsky, a psychologist at Pennsylvania State University. Belsky and several of his colleagues announced their findings last week at the international conference. The investigation consists of 1 153 children and their families living in or near Boston. The youngsters, no more than 1 month old when they entered the study in 1991, will be tracked until the age of 7. Experimenters administered questionnaires to mothers in their homes and videotaped baby caretakers interacting with the kids at ages 1, 6, and 15 months. Independent observers rated the quality of each child care efforts and noted infant nervousness. Unlike most previous studies, this one allows researchers to observe each caretaker's personality at child nursing, and kids' emotional reaction by the equipment. After taking family factors into account, other psychologists state that the researchers found no relation between the quality of child care and infants' response. But the experimenters contend that the boys who spent more than 30 hours per week in child care exhibited more emotion for their mothers than other boys who didn't, and the girls who spent the same hours per week in child care showed a modest rise in this emotion. Therefore, quality of child care outside home plays an important role in the connection between mothers and infants.
单选题Easterlin seems to suggest that
单选题Time______, we will arrange for the tourists to visit two or three more remote spots of culture value.
单选题I can't ______ his bad temper any longer.
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Elections often tell you more about
what people are against than what they are for. So it is with the European ones
that took place last week in all 25 European Union member countries. These
elections, widely trumpeted as the world's biggest-ever multination- al
democratic vote, were fought for the most part as 25 separate national contests,
which makes it tricky to pick out many common themes. But the strongest are
undoubtedly negative. Europe's voters are angry and disillusioned—and they have
demonstrated their anger and disillusion in three main ways. The
most obvious was by abstaining. The average overall turnout was just over 45% ,
by some margin the lowest ever recorded for elections to the European
Parliament. And that average disguises some big variations: Italy, for example,
notched up over 70%, but Sweden managed only 37%. Most depressing of all, at
least to believers in the European project, was the extremely low vote in many
of the new member countries from central Eu- rope, which accounted for the whole
of the fall in turnout since 1999. In the biggest, Po- land, only just over a
fifth of the electorate turned out to vote. Only a year ago, central Europeans
voted in large numbers to join the EU, which they did on May 1st. That they
abstained in such large numbers in the European elections points to early
disillusion with the European Union—as well as to a widespread feeling, shared
in the old member countries as well, that the European Parliament does not
matter. Disillusion with Europe was also a big factor in the
second way in which voters pro- tested, which was by supporting a ragbag of
populist, nationalist and explicitly anti-EU parties. These ranged from the 16%
who backed the UK Independence Party, whose declared policy is to withdraw from
the EU and whose leaders see their mission as "wrecking'' the European
Parliament, to the 14% who voted for Sweden's Junelist, and the 27% of Poles who
backed one of two anti-EU parties, the League of Catholic Families and
Selfdefence. These results have returned many more Eurosceptics and
trouble-makers to the parliament: on some measures, over a quarter of the new
MEPS will belong to the "awkward squad". That is not a bad thing, however,
for it will make the parliament more representative of European public
opinion. But it is the third target of European voters' ire that
is perhaps the most immediately significant: the fact that, in many EU
countries, old and new, they chose to vote heavily against their own
governments. This anti-incumbent vote was strong almost everywhere, but it was
most pronounced in Britain, the Czech Republic, Germany, Poland and Sweden. The
leaders of all the four biggest European Union countries, Tony Blair in Britain,
Jacques Chirac in France, Gerhard Schroder in Germany and Silvio Berlusconi in
Italy, were each given a bloody nose by their voters. The big
question now is how Europe's leaders should respond to this. By a sublime (or
terrible) coincidence, soon after the elections, and just as The Economist was
going to press, they were gathering in Brussels for a crucial summit, at which
they are due to agree a new constitutional treaty for the EU and to select a new
president for the European Commission. Going into the meeting, most EU heads of
government seemed determined to press ahead with this agenda regardless of the
European elections —even though the atmosphere after the results may make it
harder for them to strike deals.
单选题Psychology and sociology are both categorized as social sciences, and both study human behavior. However, psychology is the study of individual behavior, whereas sociology is the study of group behavior. Psychology deals with the possible problems an individual might have in social interaction with other individuals, but the main concern of sociology is the ways that different societies with different cultures deal with each other.
Sociology asks and tries to answer questions like these: why does one society progress rapidly and another one remain primitive for centuries? What is the main reason for revolution in a society? What is the role of religion or art in a society?
Psychology asks and tries to answer questions like these: why does an individual adapt easily to a changing environment and another individual become mentally disturbed? What are the causes of antisocial behavior? What role does religion or art play in an individual"s mental and emotional life?
Psychology and sociology often work together in their study of human behavior. It is assumed that by better understanding individual motivation and behavior, more will be learned about group motivation and behavior. The reverse is also assumed: if scientists can learn more about social groups, they will learn more about individuals.
单选题As a mother, she is too ______ towards her daughter, and she should let her see more of the world.
单选题Every morning, kids from a local high school are working hard. They are making and selling special coffee at a coffee café. They are also making a lot of money. These students can make up to twelve hundred dollars a day. They are selling their special coffee to airplane passengers. After the students get paid, the rest of the money goes to helping a local youth project. These high school students use a space in the Oakland airport. It is usually very crowded. Many people who fly on the planes like to drink the special coffee. One customer thinks that the coffee costs a lot but it is good and worth it. Most customers are pleasant but some are unhappy. They do not like it if the coffee care is not open for business. The students earn $6.10 an hour plus tips. They also get school credit while they learn how to run a business. Many of the students enjoy the work although it took some time to learn how to do it. They have to learn how to steam milk, load the pots, and add flavor. It takes some skill and sometimes mistakes are made. The most common mistake is forgetting to add the coffee.
单选题I have a number of______to make about this hotel so I wish to see the manager.
单选题Speaker A: I"ve got a fever and a really bad headache.
Speaker B: ______
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单选题Disagreement continued on ways to meet the undertaking to reduce carbon dioxide
emissions
given in the UN Convention on Climate Change.
单选题John boasted that he could finish the job all by himself{{U}} in no time{{/U}}.
单选题The Catholic Church is changing in America at its most visible point: the parish church where believers pray, sing and clasp hands across pews to share the peace of God. Today there are fewer parishes and fewer priests than in 1990 and fewer of the nation's 65 million Catholics in those pews. And there's no sign of return. Some blame the explosive 2002 clergy sexual abuse scandal and its financial price tag. But a study of 176 Roman Catholic dioceses shows no statistically significant link between the decline in priests and parishes and the $ 772 million the church has spent to date on dealing with the scandal. Rather, the changes are driven by a constellation of factors: ·Catholics are moving from cities in the Northeast and Midwest to the suburbs, South and Southwest. ·For decades, so few men have become priests that one in five dioceses now can't put a priest in every parish. ·Mass attendance has fallen as each generation has become less religiously observant. ·Bishops--trained to bless, not to budget--lack the managerial skills to govern multimillion-dollar institutions. All these trends had begun years before the scandal piled on financial pressures to cover settlements, legal costs, care and counseling for victims and abusers. The Archdiocese of Boston, epicenter of the crisis, sold chancery property to cover $ 85 million in settlements last year, and this year will close 67 churches and recast 16 others as new parishes or worship sites without a full-time priest. Archbishop Sean O'Malley has said the crisis and the reconfiguration plan are "in no way" related. He cites demographic shifts, the priest shortage and aging, crumbling buildings too costly to keep up. Fargo, N. D. , which spent $ 821,000 on the abuse crisis, will close 23 parishes, but it's because the diocese is short of more than 50 priests for its 158 parishes, some with fewer than a dozen families attending Mass. They know how this ~eels in Milwaukee. That archdiocese shuttered about one in five parishes from 1995 to 2003. The city consolidations "gave some people who had been driving back into the city from new homes in the suburbs a chance to say they had no loyalty to a new parish and begin going to one near their home,' says Noreen Welte, director of parish planning for the Milwaukee Archdiocese. "It gave some people who already were mad at the church for one reason or another an excuse to stop going altogether. /
单选题"Would you be do ______ it for me, please?" "Of course, with pleasure." A. kind enough B. as kind to C. so kind as to D. so kind to
单选题Aninvestorbought200sharesofstockinABCDcompanyin1990.By1992,theinvestmentwasworthonlyofitsoriginalvalue.By1995,the200shareswereworthonlyoftheirvaluein1990.Bywhatpercentdidthevalueoftheinvestmentdropfrom1992to1995?
单选题It can be concluded from the story that ______.
