已选分类
文学外国语言文学
单选题
单选题A typhoon swept across this area with heavy rains and winds ______ storng as 113 miles per hour.
单选题Whitman wrote Leaves of Grass as a tribute(赞颂) to the Civil War soldiers who (had laid) on the battlefields and (whom) he (had seen) (while serving) as an army nurse.A. had laidB. whomC. had seenD. while serving
单选题The vacuum-tube ON/OFF switches of the earliest computers were set manually; as a result, ______. A.a number of computer language came into wide use B.a computer language had to be a binary pattern C.programming was boring and not easy D.the tasks performed by a computer were made simple
单选题
单选题Using the program developed at University of California at Berkeley, the papers are checked by using ______.
单选题Under the right circumstances, choosing to spend time alone can be a huge psychological blessing. In the 1980s, the Italian journalist and author Tiziano Terzani, after many years of reporting across Asia, holed himself up in a cabin in Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan. "For a month I had no one to talk to except my dog Baoli," he wrote in his book A
Fortune Teller Told Me
. Terzani passed the time with books, observing nature, "listening to the winds in the trees, watching butterflies, enjoying silence." For the first time in a long while he felt free from the unending anxieties of daily life: "At last I had time to have time."
Terzani"s embrace of isolation was relatively unusual: Humans have long considered solitude an inconvenience, something to avoid, a punishment, a realm of loners. Science has often associated it with negative outcomes. Freud, who linked solitude with anxiety, noted that, "in children the first fears relating to situations are those of darkness and solitude." John Cacioppo, a modern social neuro-scientist who has extensively studied loneliness—what he calls "chronic perceived isolation"—contends that, beyond damaging our thinking powers, isolation can even harm our physical health. But increasingly scientists are approaching solitude as something that, when pursued by choice, can prove a therapy.
This is especially true in times of personal disorder, when the instinct is often for people to reach outside of themselves for support. "When people are experiencing crisis it"s not always just about you. It"s about how you are in society," explains Jack Fong, a sociologist at California State Polytechnic University who has studied solitude.
In other words, when people remove themselves from the social context of their lives, they are better able to see how they"re shaped by that context. Thomas Merton, a monk and writer who spent years alone, held a similar notion. "We cannot see things in perspective until we cease to hug them to our breast," he writes in
Thoughts in Solitude
. "People can go for a walk or listen to music and feel that they are deeply in touch with themselves."
单选题Passage 8 New technology links the world as never before. Our planet has shrunk. It's now a "global village" where countries are only seconds away by fax or phone or satellite link. And, of course, our ability to benefit from this high-tech communications equipment is greatly enhanced by foreign language skills. Deeply involved with this new technology is a breed of modem business people who have a growing respect for the economic value of doing business abroad. In modem markets, success overseas often helps support domestic business efforts. Overseas assignments are becoming increasingly important to advancement within executive ranks. The executive stationed in another country no longer need fear being "out of sight and out of mind." He or she can be sure that the overseas effort is central to the company's plan for success, and that promotions often follow or accompany an assignment abroad. If an employee can succeed in a difficult assignment overseas, superiors will have greater confidence in his or her ability to cope back in the United States where cross-cultural considerations and foreign language issues are becoming more and more prevalent. Thanks to a variety of relatively inexpensive communications devices with business applications, even small businesses in the United States are able to get into international markets. English is still the international language of business. But there is an ever-growing need for people who can speak another language. A second language isn't generally required to get a job in business, but having language skills gives a candidate the edge when other qualifications appear to be equal. The employee posted abroad who speaks the country's principal language has an opportunity to fast-forward certain negotiations, and can have the cultural insight to know when it is better to move more slowly. The employee at the home office who can communicate well with foreign clients over the telephone or by fax machine is an obvious asset to the firm.
单选题For fear that a new shopping center would ruin the peace of the community, many residents ______ the construction plan.
单选题 Remember global warming? Back in December, the threat of
climate change was thundering, and the rich countries agreed to cut their
carbon-dioxide and other green-house-related emissions. Since then, interest has
cooled markedly, and many European countries are already running away from the
promises they made so loudly a few months ago. But there has been much talk, and
a bit of action, to encourage renewable (可更新的) energies such as wind, hydro,
solar and all living organisms. These emit no greenhouse gases, but tend to cost
more than coal, oil or gas. The better, simpler idea is to
remember that the easiest way to reduce something is to tax it—in this case, by
taxing the carbon content of power. The dirtier the power, the more tax it would
pay. So dirty coal would be more expensive than clean coal, which would see its
price rise in relation to oil, which would be even more expensive compared to
gas, which would lose some of its price advantage over renewables.
Unless a carbon tax was so huge as to be economically crippling, it would
not remove the price differential (差别) between all renewables and fossil fuels.
But it would narrow that gap, by fixing the differing environmental costs into
the price—a useful principle in itself. It would also give renewable producers a
strong incentive to cut costs, and fossil-fuel suppliers an motivation to clean
their products. Precedents suggest strongly that a carbon tax
would be effective. But the disadvantage to carbon taxes is political. After
almost a decade of trying, the European Union gave up an attempt at a European
carbon tax last year. Germany's ruling coalition is fighting against a proposed
energy tax. In America, politicians believe that even mentioning the notion is
certain death. But many of the political objections could be met if a carbon tax
were made up for the loss elsewhere, for example by lowering payroll or sales
taxes. There is always suspicion when governments come up with clever new ways
to tax, and rightly so. The response to that suspicion should be to win the
argument, not to abandon it.
单选题
A. {{U}}ex{{/U}}ample
B. {{U}}ex{{/U}}plain
C. {{U}}ex{{/U}}pensive
D. {{U}}ex{{/U}}cuse
单选题Basketball is still a young game. in the winter or 1891, a certain college was having trouble with its boy students. The weather was so terrible that the students had to stay indoors. Since they could not enjoy their sports outside as usual, they were unhappy, and some of them often got into fights from time to time. Finally, one of the teachers at the college, J. E. Naismith, was asked to invent a new game for the students. It was not an easy job because such a game had to be played indoors, and the court was not very large. Naismith thought for a few days and invented a kind of ball game. It was a fast. exciting game with much moving and passing of the ball. It was played between two teams. To make score, the ball had to be thrown into a basket ten feet high above the floor on the wail. At each end of the court there was such a basket. At first, Naismith had planned to have the ball thrown into a box. As he could not find boxes of the right size, he had to use fruit basket in- stead. That is how the game got its name.
单选题At the end of the story Walt thought ______.
单选题Which of the following words does not describe the features of Irving" s writings?______
单选题The wagon trains had to______Indian territory to reach California.
单选题No sooner had the building been built______it collapsed in a strong earthquake.
单选题
A recent development is the local area
network (LAN). {{U}}(21) {{/U}}its name implies, it{{U}} (22)
{{/U}}a local area—possibly as small as a single room, typically an area
like an university campus or the premises of a particular business. Local area
networks were developed to{{U}} (23) {{/U}}a need specific to
microcomputers—the sharing of expensive resources. Microcomputers are cheap,
{{U}}(24) {{/U}}highcapacity disc stores, fast and/or good quality
printers, etc. are expensive. The object of the LAN is to allow{{U}} (25)
{{/U}}microcomputers shared access to these expensive resources. Since the
microcomputers are{{U}} (26) {{/U}}, it is a necessary feature of a LAN
that the method of connection to the network, and the network hardware{{U}}
(27) {{/U}}, must also be cheap. A local area network
links a number of computers and a number of sewers{{U}} (28)
{{/U}}provide communal facilities, e. g. file storage. (A server usually
includes a small microprocessor for control purposes.) The computers and servers
are known{{U}} (29) {{/U}}stations. There are two methods of{{U}}
(30) {{/U}}in common use, tings and broadcast networks.
In the ring method( often called a Cambridge Ring)all the stations are
linked in a ring, {{U}}(31) {{/U}}includes one special station, the
monitor station. In broadcast networks, all the stations are{{U}}
(32) {{/U}}to a single linear cable (usually co-ax cable), and any
transmission will be received by all stations. {{U}} (33)
{{/U}}technology is used, local area networks are a development of the
greatest importance. {{U}}(34) {{/U}}as programming is simplified by an
approach that thinks in terms of small procedures or programs, each doing a
well-defined job, the computer system of tomorrow is likely to be{{U}} (35)
{{/U}}lots of small systems, each doing a specific job, linked by a local
area network.
单选题In terms of communication in another language, marketers should not be too _____.
单选题A study of art history might be a good way to learn more about a culture than is possible to learn in general history classes. Most typical history courses concentrate on politics, economics and war. But art history focuses on much more than this because art reflects not only the political values of a people, but also religious beliefs, emotions and psychology. In addition, information about the daily activities of our ancestors can be provided by art. In short, art expresses the essential qualities of a time and a place, and a study of it clearly offers us a deeper understanding than can be found in most history books. In history books, objective information about the political life of a country is presented; that is, facts about politics are given, but opinions are not expressed. Art, on the other hand, is subjective (主观的): it reflects emotions and opinions. The great Spanish painter Francisco Goya was perhaps the first truly "political" artist. In his well-known painting The Third of May, 1808, he criticized the Spanish government for its abuse (滥用) of power over people. In the same way, art can reflect a culture's religious beliefs. For hundreds of years in Europe, religious art had been almost the only type of art that existed. Churches and other religious buildings were filled with paintings that described people and stories from the Bible. Although most people couldn't read, they could still understand the Bible stories in the pictures on church walls. By contrast, one of the main characteristics of art in the Middle East was (and stilt is) its absence of human and animal images. This reflects the Islamic belief that statues (雕像) are not holy.
单选题Issues of price, place, promotion, and product are ______ conventional concerns in planning marketing strategies. A. among the most B. among the many of C. these of the most D. most of those
