已选分类
文学外国语言文学
单选题
单选题—Nancy's grades are really bad. —Yes, but Tom's are ______.
单选题Despite all the refinements of subtlety and the dogmatism of learning, it is by the common sense and compassion of readers that are uncorrupted by the prejudices of some opinionated scholars ______ the characters and situations in medieval and Elizabethan literature, as in any other literature, can best be judged. A. that B. which C. what D. ×
单选题In most cases a router ______. A.can have only one connection to any single suhnet B.must borrow an address from its own interface C.must have a unique IP network assigned to it D.can use IP unnumbered
单选题Man: Have you any idea what Jack Johnson's doing these days? Woman: Do you know, I've lost track of him. Question: What does the woman mean? A. She has no idea where Jack is. B. She last saw Jack at the race track. C. She's been trying to track Jack. D. Jack was lately seen driving a truck.
单选题The passage suggests that a large decrease in the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere would result in ______.
单选题We were caught in a traffic jam. By the time we arrived at the airport the plane______.
单选题I (dare) (not to ask) you, (because) I thought I (must have been) wrong.
单选题The novel's unusual name______ me, so I bought one without hesitation.(2007年中国矿业大学考博试题)
单选题When they were children, Terri Schiavo's brother Bobby accidentally locked her in a suitcase. She tried so hard to get out that the suitcase jumped up and down and screamed. The scene predicted, horribly, how she would end, though by that stage she had neither walked nor talked for more than 15 years. By the time she finally died on March 31 st, her body had become a box out of which she could not escape. More than that, it had become a box out of which the United States government, Congress, the president, the governor of Florida and an army of evangelical protestors and bloggers would not let her escape. Her life, whatever its quality, became the property not merely of her husband (who had the legal right to speak for her) and her parents (who had brought her up), but of the courts, the state, and thousands of self-appointed medical and psychological experts across the country. The chief difference between her case and those of Karen Quinlan and Nancy Cruzan, much earlier victims of Persistent Vegetative State (PVS), was the existence of the internet. When posted videotapes showed Mrs Schiavo apparently smiling and communicating with those around her, doctors called these mere reflex activity, but to the layman they seemed to reveal a human being who should not be killed. On March 20th, a CAT scan of Mrs Schiavo's brain-the grey matter of the cerebral cortex more or lass gone, replaced by cerebrospinal fluid-was posted on a biog. By March 29th, it had brought 390 passionate and warring responses. All this outside interference could only exacerbate the real, cruel dilemmas of the case. After a heart attack in February 1990, when she was 26, Mrs Schiavo's brain was deprived of oxygen for five minutes and irreparably damaged. For a while, her family hoped she might be rehabilitated. Her husband Michael bought her new clothes and wheeled her round art galleries, in case her brain could respond. By 1993, he was sure it could not, and when she caught an infection he did not want her treated. Her parents disagreed, and claimed she could recover. From that point the family split, and litigation started. Each side, backed by legions of supporters, accused the other of money-grubbing and bad faith. A Florida court twice ordered Mrs Schiavo's feeding tube to be removed and Jeb Bush, the governor of Florida, overruled it. The final removal of the tube, on March 18th, was followed by an extraordinary scene, in the early hours of March 21st, when George Bush signed into law a bill allowing Mrs Schiavo's parents to appeal yet again to a federal court. But by then the courts, and two-thirds of Americans, thought that enough was enough. On March 24th the Supreme Court declined to hear the case.
单选题The department head insisted that he ______ absolute authority to regulate office work.
单选题The more you give her, ______ she seems to appreciate it. A.lesser B.the lesser C.less D.the less
单选题The pianist didn"t ______ until the last minute before the concert.
单选题For the whole period of two months, there______no rain in this area. Now the crops are dead.
单选题It is ______ impossible to find a high building in this part of this poorly developed area.
单选题_______ the weather forecast it will rain heavily late this morning.
单选题{{B}}Passage One{{/B}}
Gravity is a slippery beast. We don't
know how strong it is, how it works or how fast its effects move. But this year
we made progress. October saw the most accurate measurement yet
of Newton's gravitational constant(引力常数 ), G, a measure of the strength of the
gravitational interaction between two objects. A Swiss team calculated G's value
by measuring how the gravitational pull of two huge tanks of mercury affected
the weights of test masses. However, there are discrepancies
between measurements of G made in different labs. This year a highly
contentious(有争议的) explanation for this was proposed. A group of string theorists
proposed that gravity is subtly affected by magnetic fields, and that G should
be larger near Earth's poles where the magnetic field is stronger. Sure enough,
this fits with the measurements so far. So G's varying values might just be the
first proof of the hidden dimensions predicted by string theory.
Equally tantalising is possible evidence for the existence of
gravitational waves, the ripples in space-time supposedly caused by abrupt,
violent cosmic events. An Italian team reported that two massive aluminium bars,
one at CERN(欧洲粒子物理研究所) near Geneva, the other in Italy, had once vibrated in
unison(一致)—perhaps as a result of a passing gravitational wave, they
suggest. The claims will be closely scrutinised by gravity
researchers in Washington state. They got to turn on a very expensive toy this
year. LIGO, one of the biggest scientific instruments ever built. Its twin sets
of intersecting 4-kilometre-long laser beams should be very sensitive to any
waves. But so far the $400-million machine has not seen anything.
At least one gravitational mystery has (hopefully) been wrapped up this
year. when you move something, how long before its new position will affect its
gravitational pull on surrounding objects? In other words, what is the speed of
gravity? Newton thought the effect instantaneous, but Einstein said it could
travel no faster than the speed of light. Astronomers have
finally devised a way to test which one of them was right, based on the way
gravity bends radio waves from a distant quasar(类星体). They finished the
experiment in September. We don't yet know the answer but our money is on
Einstein.
单选题The most significant measure we should take to stop terrorists is to______them of material and moral support from within the country. A. squeeze B. eliminate C. prevent D. deprive
单选题 The American economy is growing, according to the most
recent statistics, at the high rate of 7%, and is in the middle of the largest
peacetime expansion in American history. We read in the newspapers that
practically everyone who wants a job can get one. Microsoft is running
advertisements in the New York Times practically begging Congress to issue more
visas for foreign computer and information technology workers.
In this environment, it is shocking that one group of Americans, people with
disabilities, have such a high level of unemployment: 30% are not employed—the
same percentage as when the Americans with Disabilities Act became law. Not only
did their employment and labor earnings fall during the recession of the early
1990s, but employment and earnings continued to fall during the long economic
expansion that followed. Many of these people are skilled professionals who are
highly marketable in today's economy. Part of the problem is
discrimination, and part recent court rulings favoring employers in ADA
lawsuits. Discrimination against people with disabilities is, unfortunately,
alive and well, despite the legal prohibitions against discrimination in hiring
people with disabilities. 79% of disabled people who are unemployed cite
discrimination in the workplace and lack of transportation as major factors that
prevent them from working; studies have also shown that people with disabilities
who find jobs earn less than their co-workers, and are less likely to be
promoted. Unfavorable court rulings have not been helpful,
either. Research by law professor Ruth Colker of Ohio State University has shown
that in the eight years after the ADA went into effect, employer-defendants
prevailed in more than 93% of the cases decided by trial. Of the cases appealed,
employers prevailed 84% of the time. Robert Burgdorf. Jr., who helped draft the
ADA, has written, "legal analysis has proceeded quite a way down the wrong
road." Disability activists and other legal scholars point out that Congress
intended the ADA as a national mandate for the ending of discrimination against
people with disabilities. Instead, what has occurred, in the words of one
writer, is that the courts "have narrowed the scope of the law, redefined
'disability', raised the price of access to justice and generally deemed
disability discrimination as not worthy of serious remedy." But
perhaps the greatest single problem is the federal government itself, where laws
and regulations designed to help disabled people actually provide an economic
disincentive to work. As Sen. Edward Kennedy wrote, "the high unemployment rate
among people receiving federal disability benefits is not because their federal
benefits programs have 'front doors that are too big', but because they have
'back doors that are too small'."
单选题Sometimes in drawing and designing, the sign X______the unknown number. A. facilitates B. fascinates C. denotes D. jots
