已选分类
文学外国语言文学
单选题______a rigid, unidirectional mode of demystification which saw all such other modes as subsidiary and peripheral, it began to see all alternatives to its mode of demystification as conspiracies against human good.
单选题The word "classified" in the second paragraph most probably means______
单选题The author believes that man's "pursuit of happiness" in America has ______.
单选题This room is comfortable ______.
单选题Although the main motivation for a renewed interest in logic was a search for the foundations of mathematics, the chief Uprotagonists/U of this effort extended their inquiry into the domain of the natural languages.
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单选题The (contemporary) Thanksgiving turkey is an (engineered) product, (streamline) and marketed by giant turkey factories for modern (consumers).
单选题Which of the following words best illustrate LOANBLEND?
单选题For semi-professional artists, performing before the public is a good chance ____.
单选题 If phone calls and web pages can be beamed through
the air to portable devices, then why not electrical power, too? It is a
question many consumers and device manufacturers have been asking themselves for
some time. But to seasoned observers of the electronics industry, the promise of
wireless recharging sounds depressingly familiar. In 2004 Splashpower, a British
technology firm, was citing “very strong” interest from consumer-electronics
firms for its wireless charging pad. Based on the principle of electromagnetic
induction (EMI) that Faraday had discovered in the 19th century, the company’s
“Splashpad” contained a coil that generated a magnetic field when a current
flowed through it. When a mobile device containing a corresponding coil was
brought near the pad, the process was reversed as the magnetic field generated a
current in the second coil, charging the device’ s battery without the use of
wires. Unfortunately, although Faraday’s principles of electromagnetic induction
have stood the test of time, Splashpower has not — it was declared bankrupt last
year without having launched a single product. Thanks to its
simplicity .and measurability, electromagnetic induction is still the technology
of choice among many of the remaining companies in the wireless-charging arena.
But, as Splashpower found, turning the theory into profitable practice is not
straightforward. But lately there have been some promising
developments. The first is the formation in December 2008 of
the Wireless Power Consortium, a body dedicated to establishing a common
standard for inductive wireless charging, and thus promoting its adoption. The
new consortium’s members include big consumer-electronics firms, such as Philips
and Sanyo, as well as Texas Instruments, a chipmaker. Fierce
competition between manufacturers of mobile devices is also accelerating the
introduction of wireless charging. The star of this year’s Consumer Electronics
Show held in Las Vegas was the Pre, a smart-phone from Palm. The Pre has an
optional charging pad, called the Touchstone, which uses electromagnetic
induction to charge the device wirelessly. As wireless-charging
equipment based on electromagnetic induction heads towards the market, a number
of alternative technologies are also being developed. PowerBeam, a start-up
based in Silicon Valley, uses lasers to beam power from one place to
another. It now seems to be a matter of when, rather than if,
wireless charging enters the mainstream. And if those in the field do find
themselves languishing in the disillusionment, they could take some
encouragement from Faraday himself. He observed that “nothing is too wonderful
to be true if it be consistent with the laws of nature.” Not even a wirelessly
rechargeable iPhone.
单选题(2004)You don't need to introduce him to me. I____him several times.
单选题A quality education is the ultimate liberator. It can free people from poverty, giving them the power to greatly improve their lives and take a productive place in society. It can also free communities and countries, allowing them to leap forward into periods of wealth and social unity that otherwise would not be possible.
For this reason, the international community has committed itself to getting all the world's children into primary school by 2015, a commitment known as Education for All.
Can education for all be achieved by 2015? The answer is definitely "yes", although it is a difficult task. If we now measure the goal in terms of children successfully completing a minimum of five years of primary school, instead of just enrolling for classes, which used to be the measuring stick for education, then the challenge becomes even more difficult. Only 32 countries were formerly believed to be at risk of not achieving education for all on the basis of enrollment rates. The number rises to 88 if completion rates are used as the criterion.
Still, the goal is achievable with the right policies and the right support from the international community. 59 of the 88 countries at risk can reach universal primary completion by 2015 if they bring the efficiency and quality of their education systems into line with standards observed in higher-performing systems. They also need significant increases in external financing and technical support. The 29 countries lagging farthest behind will not reach the goal without unprecedented rates of progress. But this is attainable with creative solution, including use of information technologies, flexible and targeted foreign aid, and fewer people living in poverty.
A key lesson of experience about what makes development effective is that a country's capacity to use aid well depends heavily on its policies, institutions and management. Where a country scores well on these criteria, foreign assistance can be highly effective.
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单选题{{B}}Text 4{{/B}}
Though it is mere 1 to 3 percent of the
population, the upper class possesses at least 25 percent of the nation's
wealth. This class has two segments: upper-upper and lower-upper. Basically, the
upper-upper class is the "old rich"—families that have been wealthy for several
generations—an aristocracy of birth and wealth. Their names are in the Social
Register, a listing of acceptable members of high society. A few are known
across the nation, such as the Rockefellers, Roosevelts, and Vanderbilts. Most
are not visible to the general public. They live in grand seclusion, drawing
their income from the investment of their inherited wealth. In contrast, the
lower-upper class is the "new rich". Although they may be wealthier than some of
the old rich; the new rich have hustled to make their money like everybody else
beneath their class. Thus their prestige is generally lower than that of the old
rich, who have not found it necessary to lift a finger to make their money, and
who tend to look down upon the new rich. However its wealth is
acquired, the upper class is very, very rich. They have enough money and leisure
time to cultivate an interest in the arts and to collect rare books, painting,
and sculpture. They generally live in exclusive areas, belong to exclusive
social clubs, communicate with each other, and marry their own kind—all of which
keeps them so distant from the masses that they have been called the
out-of-sight class. More than any other class, they tend to be conscious of
being members of a class. They also command an enormous amount of power and
influence here and a broad, as they hold many top government positions, run the
Council on Foreigh Relations, and control multinational corporations. The
actions affect the lives of millions.
单选题You may fall prey to a nonviolent but frightening and fast-growing crime: identity theft. It happens to at least 500, 000 new victims each year, according to government figures. And it happens very easily because every identification number you have Social Security, credit card, driver's license, telephone- "is a key that unlocks some storage of money or goods," says a fraud program manager of the US Postal Service. "So if you throw away your credit card receipt and I get it and use the number on it, I'm not becoming you, but to the credit card company I've become your account." One major problem, experts say, is that the Social Security Number (SSN) — originally meant only for retirement benefit and tax purposes — has become the universal way to identify people. It is used as identification by the military, colleges and in billions of commercial transactions. Yet a shrewd thief can easily snatch your SSN, not only by stealing your wallet, but also by taking mail from your box, going through your trash for discarded receipts and bills or asking for it over the phone on some pretext. Using your SSN, the thief applies for a credit card in your name, asking that it be sent to a different address than yours, and uses it for multiple purchases. A couple of months later the credit card company, or its debt collection agency, presses you for payment. You don't have to pay the debt, but you must clean up your damaged credit record. That means getting a police report and copy of the erroneous contract, and then using them to clear the fraud from your credit report, which is held by a credit bureau. Each step can require a huge amount of effort. In the Collins' case, the clearance of the erroneous charges from their record required three years of poring over records and $6, 000 in solicitor's fees. In the meantime, they were denied a loan to build a vacation home, forced to pay cash for a new heating and cooling system, hounded by debt collectors, and embarrassed by the spectacle of having their home watched by investigators looking for the missing car. Of course, thousands of people are caught and prosecuted for identity theft. But it was only last year that Congress made identity theft itself a federal crime. That law set up a special government office to help victims regain their lost credit and to streamline police efforts by tracking cases on a national scale. Consumer advocates say this may help but will not address the basic problems, which, they believe, are causing the outbreak in identity theft: industry's rush to attract more customers by issuing instant credit, inadequate checking of identity, and too few legal protections for consumers personal information.
单选题The development of female writers is
hindered
by the extreme conventionality of the other sex.
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A. {{U}}ch{{/U}}ess
B. {{U}}ch{{/U}}aracter
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单选题The consumption of milk has______by 10 percent this year as compared to that in 2000.
