已选分类
文学
单选题Although hes wealthy, he spends ______ on clothes. A.little B.few C.a little D.a few
单选题Thank you for your postcard; it was very______of you to send it.
单选题Instead of waiting for the arrival of our counsel, it is better to have it out with the thief right away.
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单选题The top floors of a building collapsed trapping a construction worker in the rubble(瓦砾), but he was______and can speak to rescuers.
单选题______ , leaves from certain trees such as the maple turn into bright colours.
单选题What do you think the plan? [A] / [B] of [C] on
单选题A. chalkB. falseC. halfD. walk
单选题The author believes that our knowledge of social systems is more secure than that of physical systems because ______.
单选题What is main purpose of the passage? A. To outline contrasting types of economy. B. To explain the science of economics. C. To argue for the superiority of one economics. D. To compare barter and money exchange markets.
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单选题Man: Peter was a great guy. He was drowned while rescuing a child from icy water of the river yesterday.
Woman: Well, as far as I know, that was not the first dangerous situation he was in.
Question: What does the woman mean?
单选题He has won a ______ of three hundred dollars to Oxford. A. award B. scholarship C. pension D. allowance
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单选题Gloves have been worn since prehistoric time for protection. for ornamentation, ______ social status.
单选题The investigation______evidence of a large-scale illegal trade in wild birds.
单选题{{B}}Passage 3{{/B}}
The single greatest shift in the
history of mass-communication technology occurred in the 15th century, and was
well described by Victor Hugo in a famous chapter of Notre Dame de Paris. It was
a Cathedral. On all parts of the giant building, statuary and stone
representations of every kind, combined with huge widows of stained glass, told
the stories of the Bible and the saints, displayed the intricacies of Christian
theology, adverted to the existence of highly unpleasant demonic winged
creatures, referred diplomatically to the majesties of political power, and in
addition, by means of bells in bell towers, told time for the benefit of all of
Pairs and much of France. It was an awesome engine of communication.
Then came the transition to something still more awesome. The new
technology of mass communication was portable, could sit on your table, and was
easily replicable, and yet, paradoxically, contained more information, more
systematically presented, than even the largest of cathedrals. It was the
printed book. Though it provided no bells and could not tell time, the over-all
superiority of the new invention was unmistakable. In the last
ten or twenty years, we have been undergoing a more or less equivalent
shift--this time to a new life as a computer-using population. The gain in
portability, capability, ease, orderliness, accuracy, reliability, and
information-storage over anything achievable by pen scribbling, typewriting, and
cabinet filing is recognized by all. The progress for civilization is undeniable
and, plainly, irreversible. Yet, just as the book's triumph over the cathedral
divided people into two groups, one of which prospered, while the other lapsed
into gloom, the computer's triumph has also divided the human race.
You have only to bring a computer into a room to see that some people
begin at once to buzz with curiosity and excitement, sit down to conduct
experiments, ooh and ah at the boxes and beeps, and master the use of the
computer or a new program as quickly as athletes playing a delightful new game.
But how difficult it is--how grim and frightful!--for the other people, the
defeated class, whose temperament does not naturally respond to computers. The
machine whirries and glows before them and their faces twitch. They may be
splendidly educated, as measured by book-reading, yet their instincts are all
wrong, and no amount of manual-studying and mouse-clicking will make them right.
Computers require a sharply different set of aptitudes, and, if the aptitudes
are missing, little can be done, and misery is guaranteed. Is
the computer industry aware that computers have divided mankind into two new,
previously unknown classes, the computer personalities and the non-computer
personalities? Yes, the industry knows this. Vast stuns have been expended in
order to adapt the computer to the limitations of non-computer personalities.
Apple's Macintosh, with its zooming animations and pull-down menus and little
pictures of life folders and watch faces and trash cans, pointed the way. Such
seductions have soothed the apprehensions of a certain number of the
computer-averse. This spring, the computer industry's efforts are reaching a
culmination of sorts. Microsoft, Bill Gates' giant corporation, is to bring out
a program package called Microsoft Bob, designed by Mr. Gates' wife, Melinda
French, and intended to render computer technology available even to people who
are openly terrified of computers. Bob's principle is to take the several tasks
of operating a computer, rename them in a folksy style, and assign to them the
images of an ideal room in ideal home, with furniture and bookshelves, and with
chummy cartoon helpers ("Friends of Bob") to guide the computer user over the
rough spots, and, in that way, simulate an atmosphere that feels nothing like
computers.
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单选题Ray: ______. Where was I?
Brenda: You were talking about your trip to South Africa.
