已选分类
文学
单选题They are Uconfronting/U tremendous and more complicated problems.
单选题Tom's parents died when he was a child, so he was ______ by his relatives.
单选题The vast majority of people in any culture ______ to the established standard of that culture.
单选题Did you enjoy the trip? Im afraid not. And ______. A) my classmates cant either. B) my classmates dont too. C) neither do my classmates. D) neither did my classmates.
单选题Would you please______these books to your classmates?
单选题He signed his name ______ two witnesses.
单选题The______ in my son's clothes are beginning to come apart. A. seams B. beams C. rims D. segments
单选题Go Tell It on the Mountain is mainly about the experience of a boy named_____.
单选题With the awfully limited vocabulary to only a thousand words or fewer, the reader resembles a color blind artist who is only aware of a few colors and consequently his ability to create on canvas is
lamentably
restricted.
单选题Cultural responses to modernization often manifest themselves in the mass media. For example, Aldous Huxley, in Brave New World, created a fictional world in which he cautioned readers that modern science and technology posed a threat to individual dignity. Charlie Chaplin's film Modern Times, set in a futuristic manufacturing plant, also told the story of the dehumanizing impact of modernization and machinery. Writers and artists, in their criticisms of the modern world, often point to technology's ability to alienate people from one another, capitalism's tendency to foster greed, and government's inclination to create bureaucracies that oppress rather than help people. Among the major values of the modern period, four typically manifest themselves in the cultural environment: celebrating the individual, believing in rational order, working efficiently, and rejecting tradition. These values of the modern period were originally embodied in the printing press and later in newspapers and magazines. The print media encouraged the vision of individual writers, publishers, and readers who circulated new ideas. Whereas the premodern period was guided by strong beliefs in a natural or divine order, becoming modern meant elevating individual self-expression to a central position. Along with democratic breakthroughs, however, individualism and the Industrial Revolution triggered modern forms of hierarchy, in which certain individuals and groups achieved higher standing in the social order. For example, those who managed commercial enterprises gained more control over the economic ladder, while an intellectual class of modern experts, who mastered specialized realms of knowledge, gained increasing power over the nation's social, political, and cultural agendas. To be modern also meant to value the capacity of organized, scientific minds to solve problems efficiently. Progressive thinkers maintained that the printing press, the telegraph, and the railroad in combination with a scientific attitude would foster a new type of informed society. At the core of this society, the printed mass media, particularly newspapers, would educate the citizenry, helping to build and maintain an organized social framework. Journalists strove for the premodern ideal through a more fact-based and efficient approach to reporting. They discarded decorative writing and championed a lean look. Modern front-page news de-emphasized description, commentary, and historical context. The lead sentences that reported a presidential press conference began to look similar, whether they were on the front page in Tupelo, Mississippi, or Wahpeton, North Dakota. Just as modern architecture made many American skylines look alike, the front pages of newspapers began to resemble one another. Finally, to be modern meant to throw off the rigid rules of the past, to break with tradition. Modern journalism became captivated by timely and immediate events. As a result, the more standardized forms of front-page journalism, on the one hand, championed facts and current events while efficiently meeting deadlines. But on the other hand, modern newspapers often failed to take a historical perspective or to analyze sufficiently the ideas underlying these events.
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单选题(It) was (so) a long journey (that) we felt very tired (when) we arrived.
单选题After Los Angeles, Atlanta may be America's most car-dependent city. Atlantans sentimentally give their cars names, compare speeding tickets and jealously guard any side street where it is possible to park. The city's roads are so well worn that the first act of the new mayor, Shirley Franklin, was to start repairing potholes. In 1998, 13 metro counties lost federal highway funds because their air-pollution levels violated the Clean Air Act. The American Highway Users Alliance ranked three Atlanta interchanges among the 18 worst bottlenecks in the country. Other cities in the same fix have reorganized their highways, imposed commuter and car taxes, or expanded their public-transport systems. Atlanta does not like any of these things. Public transport is a vexed subject, too. Atlanta's metropolitan region is divided into numerous county and smaller city governments, which find it hard to work together. Railways now serve the city center and the airport, but not much else; bus stops are often near invisible poles, offering no indication of which bus might stop there, or when. Georgia's Democratic governor, Roy Barnes, who hopes for reelection in November, has other plans. To win back the federal highway money lost under the Clean Air Act, he created the Georgia Regional Transportation Authority (GRTA), a 15-member board with the power to make the county governments, the city and the ten-county Atlanta Regional Commission cooperate on transport plans, whether they like it or not. Now GRTA has issued its own preliminary plan, allocating $ 4.5 billion over the next three years for a variety of schemes. The plan earmarks money to widen roads; to have an electric shuttle bus shuttle tourists among the elegant villas of Buckhead; and to create a commuter rail link between Atlanta and Macon, two hours to the south. Counties will be encouraged, with generous ten-to-one matching funds, to start express bus services. Public goodwill, however, may not stretch as far as the next plan, which is to build the Northern Arc highway for 65 miles across three counties north of the city limits. GRTA has allotted $270m for this. Supporters say it would ease the congestion on local roads; opponents think it would worsen over-development and traffic. The counties affected, and even GRTA's own board, are divided. The governor is in favor, however; and since he can appoint and fire GRTA'S members, that is probably the end of the story. Mr Barnes has a tendency to do as he wants, regardless. His arrogance on traffic matters could also lose him votes. But Mr Barnes think that Atlanta's slowing economy could do him more harm than the anti-sprawl movement.
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单选题With all his experience abroad he was a major {{U}}asset{{/U}} to the company.
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单选题Eggs are my favorite food. I like them (21) , hard-boiled, scrambled, or poached. I eat eggs for (22) , lunch, and dinner. I eat eggs here, there, and everywhere! Eggs taste great. You can eat them by (23) or as part of any meal. Eggs are (24) used as an ingredient in many prepared foods. Can you think of any foods that contain (25) ? Eggs are really a perfect food. They are (26) in most of the nutrients we need to maintain good (27) . When a baby chicken develops (28) an egg, the egg (29) and yolk are the only foods they need. Many people believe that eggs are (30) . They point out that eggs contain a very high amount of cholesterol (胆固醇). Too (31) of one kind of cholesterol in our blood can cause heart disease. There is no evidence that eggs (32) the harmful cholesterol in our blood. When we eat foods that are (33) in cholesterol, our bodies make (34) of it to balance, or adjust. If you want to enjoy a tasty and healthy food, eat plenty of (35) .
单选题{{B}}Part A{{/B}}{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} Read the following four
texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your
answers on Answer Sheet 1.{{B}}Text 1{{/B}}
St. Paul didn't like it. Moses
warned his people against it. Hesiod declared it "mischievious” and
"hard to get rid of it", but Oscar Wilder said, "Gossip is charming."
"History is merely gossip," he wrote in one of his famous plays. "But
scandal is gossip made tedious by morality. ' In times past,
under Jewish law, gossipmongers might be fined or flogged. The Puritans put them
in stocks or ducking stools, but no punishment seemed to have the desired effect
of preventing gossip, which has continued uninterrupted across the back fences
of the centuries. Today, however, the much-maligned human foible
is being looked at in a different light. Psychologists, sociologists,
philosophers, even evolutionary biologists are concluding that
gossip may not be so bad after all. Gossip is "an intrinsically
valuable activity", philosophy professor Aaron Ben-Ze'ev states in a book he has
edited, entitled Good Gossip. For one thing, gossip helps us
acquire information that we need to know that doesn't come through ordinary
channels, such as: "What was the real reason so and-so was fired from the
office?" Gossip also is a form of social bonding, Dr. Ben-Ze'ev says. It is "a
kind of sharing" that also "satisfies the tribal need-- namely, the need to
belong to and be accepted by a unique group". What's more, the professor notes,
"Gossip is enjoyable." Another gossip groupie, Dr. Ronald De
Sousa, a professor of philosophy at the University of Toronto, describes gossip
basically as a form of indiscretion and a "saintly virtue", by which he means
that the knowledge spread by gossip will usually end up being slightly
beneficial. "It seems likely that a world in which all information were
universally available would be preferable to a world where immense power resides
in the control of secrets," he writes. Still, everybody knows
that gossip can have its ill effects, especially on the poor wretch being
gossiped about. And people should refrain from certain kinds of gossip
that might be harmful, even though the ducking stool is long out of
fashion. By the way, there is also an interesting strain of
gossip called medical gossip, which in its best form, according to researchers
Jerry M. Suls and Franklin Goodkin, can motivate people with symptoms of serious
illness, but who are unaware of it, to seek medical help. So go
ahead and gossip. But remember, if (as often is the case among gossipers)
you should suddenly become one of the gossipees instead, it is best to employ
the foolproof defense recommended by Plato, who may have learned the lesson from
Socrates, who as you know was the victim of gossip spread that he was corrupting
the youth of Athens: When men speak ill of thee, so live thiat nobody will
believe them. Or, as Will Rogers said, "Live so that you wouldn't .be
ashamed to sell the family parrot to the town
gossip."
单选题It is______impossible to find a good educational program in this channel on TV.
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The geology of the Earth's surface is
dominated by the particular properties of water. Present on Earth in solid,
liquid, and gaseous states, water is exceptionally reactive. It dissolves,
transports, and precipitates many chemical compounds and is constantly modifying
the face of the Earth. Evaporated from the oceans, water vapor
forms clouds, some of which are transported by wind over the continents.
Condensation from the clouds provides the essential agent of continental
erosion: rain. Precipitated onto the ground, the water trickles down to form
brooks, streams, and rivers, constituting what is called the hydrographic
network. This immense polarized network channels the water toward a single
receptacle: an ocean. Gravity dominates this entire step in the cycle because
water tends to minimize its potential energy by running from high altitudes
toward the reference point that is sea level. The rate at which
a molecule of water passes through the cycle is not random but is a measure of
the relative size of the various reservoirs. If we define residence time as the
average time for a water molecule to pass through one of the three
reservoirs--atmosphere, continent, and ocean--we see that the times are very
different. A water molecule stays, on an average, eleven days in the atmosphere,
one hundred years on a continent and forty thousand years in the ocean. This
last figure shows the importance of the ocean as the principal reservoir of the
hydrosphere but also the rapidity of water transport on the
continents. A vast chemical separation process takes places
during the flow of water over the continents. Soluble ions such as calcium,
sodium, potassium, and some magnesium are dissolved and transported. Insoluble
ions such as aluminum, iron, and silicon stay where they are and form the thin,
fertile skin of soil on which vegetation can grow. Sometimes soils are destroyed
and transported mechanically during flooding. The erosion of the continents thus
results from two closely linked and interdependent processes, chemical erosion
and mechanical erosion. Their respective interactions and efficiency depend on
different factors.
