填空题[A]SowhatdotheAmericansthinkoftheforeignvisitorswhoarriveforthetorridheat,justwhenlocalsfromtheUnitedStatestendtoavoidDeathValley?SaysparkrangerBrendaHenson,"TheforeignerswanttoexperiencetheheatinDeathValley.Theythinkthisisneat.Ithinkit'scrazy."[B]Theplacethatthetourists—mainlyfromEurope—aredrawntoisanactuallyseriesofsaltflats225kmlongand6kmto26kmwide.Thesearingheatofthesunisreflectedupfromthisdryandwaterlessterrain,andtheonlynoisethatbreaksthesilenceinthisvastvalleyisthecrunchofvisitors'shoesonthefinesaltcrystalsleftbyevaporation.Birdsandanimalsarelargelyabsent,andonlythehardiestplantshaveanychanceofexistenceinthisunforgivinglandscape.[C]Accordingtoparkrangers,anaverageof1.3millionvisitorsentertheparkeachyear.FromJunethroughAugust,90percentofthemareforeigners,theretoexperiencetheblisteringheatthatgivesDeathValleyitsname.ArtHorton,meteorologistfromtheNationalWeatherService,saystheaveragehighinJulyis46.2degCandthelow30degC.ForAugust,theaveragehighis45.2degCandthelow29.4degC.[D]Allaround,mountainstowerabovethesaltflats.Acrosstheflats,visitorscanseeTelescopePeak,thehighestpointintheparkatmorethan3,350m.Normallysnowcoveredinwinter,themountainrangeisbareinsummer,butattheedgesoftheValleyofferssomeshadefromtheblisteringsun.[E]EvenDeathValley'shotnewsweathercanhaveextremesabovethat.Thehott,dayseverrecordedwereonJune30,1994,andJuly14,1972whentemperatulhit53.3degC.Andinwinter,DeathValleycontinuestoliveuptoitsname,pducingcoldnessattheotherendofthescalethatcanbelife-threateningtoanyocaughtexposedinit.ThecoldestdayrecordedinDeathValleywasonJanuary31988whenitwas18degCbelowzero.[F]OnetouristfromParissumsuptheattractionverysimply:"Wecomeherebecatwecantellallourfriendsandfamilythatwe'vebeentothehottestplaceintworld,"hesays.[G]DeathValleyisthelowest,hottest,driestareainNorthAmerica.TheclimatethisCaliforniaNationalParkhaslessthanScmofrainfallayearandtemperaturesto53degCinsummer.That'senoughtokeepsensibleAmericansawayduringlhottestmonthsfromJunetoAugust.Butit'sthenthatthesizzlingtemperaturesastiflingheatdrawtheirmostavidfans,theforeigntourists.Fromallovertheglobtheydescendtothevalleyfloorinrentalcars,carryingmapsandwaterbottles,avigorouslyfanningthemselveswithnewspaperstokeepcool.Order:
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填空题Gallup Poll
填空题One is more ______ to make mistakes when one is tired. (liable, susceptible, subject, prone)
填空题Every year Les Wexner, the owner of Victoria"s Secret, a lingerie (女士内衣) retailer, takes a month off to travel the world looking for other companies" ideas to adopt. Mr. Wexner"s philosophy is that business should celebrate imitation.
That is almost a heresy. Businesses are told to innovate or die. Imitators are cast as the bad guys. But in the real world, companies copy and succeed. The iPod was not the first digital-music player; nor was the iPhone the first smartphone or the iPad the first tablet. Apple imitated others" products but made them far more appealing.
The pace and intensity of legal imitation has quickened in recent years, argues Oded Shenkar, a management professor at Ohio State University, in a provocative book, "Copycats: How Smart Companies Use Imitation to Gain a Strategic Edge".
History shows that imitators often end up winners. Who now remembers Chux, the first disposable nappies, whose thunder was stolen by Pampers? Ray Kroc, who built McDonald"s, copied White Castle, inventor of the fast-food burger joint. Even Playboy magazine was just an imitator, noted Ted Levitt, one of the earliest management gurus to acknowledge the role of imitation. Copying is not only far commoner than innovation in business, wrote Levitt in the 1960s, but a surer route to growth and profits. According to "Copycats", studies show that imitators do at least as well and often better from any new product than innovators do. Followers have lower research-and-development costs, and less risk of failure because the product has already been market-tested. A study by Peter Golder and Gerard Tellis, "Pioneer Advantage: Marketing Logic or Marketing Legend", found that innovators captured only 7% of the market for their product over time.
Firms seldom admit to being copycats. But some businesspeople are willing to talk about the limitations of innovation. Kevin Rollins, a former chief executive of Dell, a computer-maker, asked, "If innovation is such a competitive weapon, why doesn"t it translate into profitability?" But most remain obsessed with their own inventions. Copying is taboo. Praise and promotion do not go to employees who borrow from other firms.
As a result, firms pay insufficient attention to the art of copying. Levitt examined a group of companies whose sales depended on regularly launching new products. None of them, he found, had either a formal or informal policy on how to respond to other firms" innovations. So they were often far too slow to imitate rivals" successes, and missed out on profits. Not much has changed since Levitt"s day. Though copying is fairly common, lots of companies fail to do it effectively. American firms in particular are too obsessed with innovation, argues Mr. Shenkar. By contrast, Asian companies—such as Panasonic, whose former parent, Matsushita, was nicknamed maneshita denki, "electronics that have been copied"—have excelled at legal imitation.
Excessive copying, of course, could be bad for society as a whole. Joseph Schumpeter worried that if innovators could not get enough reward from new products because imitators were taking so much of the profit, they would spend less on developing them. But that is not the immediate concern of corporations. Copying is here to stay; businesses may as well get good at it.
A. are too obsessed with innovation.
B. are actively involved in legal imitation.
C. discourage innovators" enthusiasm for innovation.
D. laugh last in market competition.
E. pay little attention to imitate rival"s success.
F. are slow to react to rival"s imitation.
G. explicitly discuss their suspicion about innovation.
填空题提示:Mike打电话给Rose,告诉她本周上映新电影,问她是否愿意去看。Rose说愿意,但不知道什么时间。Mike问星期一晚上怎么样,Rose说自己星期一得上班到十点,问星期天行不行,Mike说可以。两人约定星期天晚差二十分钟十点由Mike开车去接Rose。 Rose--R; Mike--M R: Hello. This is Rose speaking. M: Hello, Rose. It's Mike. (56) this week. I wonder (57) . R: I'd love to. But when? M: How about Monday evening? R: Monday evening? I'm afraid I can't. (58) . M: That's a pity ! R: (59) ? I'm free then. M: Sunday would be fine. R: What time shall we meet? M: (60) . I'll meet you at your house. R: Good. See you then. M: Good-bye.
填空题The share of young adults living with their parents edged up last year despite improvements in the economy—a sign that the effects of the recession are lingering.
In a report on the status of families, the Census Bureau on Tuesday said 13.6% of Americans ages 25 to 34 were living with their parents in 2012, up slightly from 13.4% in 2011. Though the trend began before the recession, it accelerated sharply during the downturn. In the early 2000s, about 10% of people in this age group lived at home.
The figures are the latest evidence of the recession"s continuing impact on young Americans, who are finding it harder to land jobs and take on the costs of setting up their own homes.
Vivien Tsuong, 28, has a job as a marketing specialist, but is living at home in San Gabriel, Calif., to save money. In 2010, after returning from Japan, where she taught English for two years, Ms. Tsuong struggled for a year to find work. After landing a position in 2012, she moved into her current job at a company that sells computer and Internet products this spring. Now that she is stable professionally, she wants to build savings, just in case she encounters more job turbulence, she said.
Ms. Tsuong said many of her friends are spending $700 or $800 a month on rent. "I can move out if I really wanted to, but given the situation with rent and gas, I feel like I can save more living at home," she said. "If you can save now, you"re sort of investing in your future."
Demographers say joblessness during the recession and in its aftermath has fueled the trend of young adults living at home. The percentage of 25-to-34-year-olds living with parents climbed from 10.6% early in the 2000s to 11.8% in 2007, when the recession officially began. But after that the figure jumped sharply.
Richard Fry, an economist at Pew Research Center, said the rising share of young adults at home reflects changing attitudes about the phenomenon as well as economic pressures.
"Recent surveys by Pew found over 60% of people ages 18 to 34 knew someone who had moved back in with their parents because of the economy," he said, "and that four of five people ages 25 to 34 who were living with their parents were satisfied with the arrangement."
"That may suggest there is less stigma attached to living at home," said Mr. Fry. "Living with your parents may not be what it once was," he said.
Other trends also are playing a role: Young adults are marrying later, putting off having children and finding it harder to establish stable careers.
The latest findings have important implications for the nation"s housing market and broader recovery, since they suggest fewer young Americans are buying houses, furniture and appliances—purchases that fuel much of the country"s economic growth.
While Americans are spending much more than they did during the throes of the recession, overall consumption growth has remained much weaker than in past recoveries.
A. said people"s attitude about young adults living at home as well as the economic pressure is changing.
B. found that there were 11.8% of Americans ages 25-34 living at home in 2007, which was higher than that in 2011.
C. trend to get married later and postpone having a baby.
D. thinks the consequence of unemployment in recession has intensified the trend of young adults living at home.
E. emphasizes that more people feel it shameful to live with parents nowadays.
F. held that before the recession, the trend of young adults living at home has already begun, and accelerated sharply during the downturn.
G. would like to save money by living at home for fear of running into job turbulence.
填空题Little did I expect that Uncle Sam would die so soon. I found him in good health when I called on him only a couple of weeks ago.
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填空题Directions: You are going to read a list of headings and a
text. Choose a heading from the list A-F that best fits the meaning of each
numbered part of the text. The first and last paragraphs of the text are not
numbered. There is one extra heading which you do not need to use.Archaeological study covers an extremely long span of time and a great
variety of subjects. The earliest subjects of archaeological study date from the
origins of humanity. These include fossil remains believed to be of human
ancestors who lived 3.5 million to 4.5 million years ago. The earliest
archaeological sites include those at Hadar, Ethiopia; Laetoli, Tanzania; East
Turkana, Kenya; and elsewhere in East Africa. These sites contain evidence of
the first appearance of bipedal (uprightwalking, apelike early humans).
{{U}} {{U}} 1 {{/U}} {{/U}} The first
physically modem humans, Homo sapiens, appeared in tropical Africa between
200,000 and 150,000 years ago-dates determined by molecular biologists and
archaeologists working together. Dozens of archaeological sites throughout Asia
and Europe show how people migrated from Africa and settled in these two
continents during the last Ice Age (100,000 to 15,000 years ago). {{U}}
{{U}} 2 {{/U}} {{/U}} Archaeologists have
documented that the development of agriculture took place about 10,000 years
ago. Early domestication—the planting and harvesting of plants and the breeding
and herding of animals— is evident in such places as the ancient settlement of
Jericho in Jordan and in Tehuacán Valley in Mexico. Archaeology plays a major
role in the study of early civilizations, such as those of the Sumerians of
Mesopotamia, who built the city of Ur, and the ancient Egyptians, who are famous
for the pyramids near the city of Giza and the royal sepulchres (tombs) of the
Valley of the Kings at Thebes. {{U}} {{U}} 3 {{/U}}
{{/U}} Archaeological research spans the entire development of
phenomena that are unique to humans. For instance, archaeology tells the story
of when people learned to bury their dead and developed beliefs in an afterlife.
Sites containing signs of the first simple but purposeful burials in graves date
to as early as 40,000 years ago in Europe and Southwest Asia. By the time people
lived in civilizations, burials and funeral ceremonies had become extremely
important and elaborate rituals. {{U}} {{U}} 4 {{/U}}
{{/U}} Archaeology also examines more recent historical periods.
Some archaeologists work with historians to study American colonial life, for
example. They have learned such diverse information as how the earliest colonial
settlers in Jamestown, Virginia, traded glass beads for food with native
Algonquian peoples; how the lives of slaves on plantations reflected their roots
in Africa; and how the first major cities in the United States developed.
{{U}} {{U}} 5 {{/U}} {{/U}} A. For example, the
Moche lords of Sipán in coastal Peru were buried in about AD 400 in fine cotton
dress and with exquisite ornaments of bead, gold, and silver. Few burials rival
their lavish sepulchres. Being able to trace the development of such rituals
over thousands of years has added to our understanding of the development of
human intellect and spirit. B. By 40,000 years ago people could
be found hunting and gathering food across most of the regions of Africa.
Populations in different regions employed various technologiealdevelopments in
adapting to their different environments and climates. C.
Archaeological studies have also provided much information about the people who
first arrived in the America over 12,000 years ago. D. The
first fossil records of vascular plants—that is, land plants with tissue that
carries food— appeared in the Silurian period. They were simple plants that had
not developed separate stems and leaves. E. Laetoli even
reveals footprints of humans from 3.6 million years ago. Some sites also contain
evidence of the earliest use of simple tools. Archaeologists have also recorded
how primitive forms of humans spread out of Africa into Asia about 1.8 million
years ago, then into Europe about 900,000 years ago. F. One
research project involves the study of garbage in present-day cities across the
United States. This garbage is the modern equivalent of the remains found in the
archaeological record. In the future, archaeologists will continue to move into
new realms of study. G. Other sites that represent great human
achievement are as varied as the cliff dwellings of the ancient Anasazi (a
group of early Native Americans of North America) at Mesa Verde, Colorado; the
Inca city of Machu Picehu high in the Andes Mountains of Peru; and the
mysterious, massive stone portrait heads of remote Easter Island in the
Pacific.
填空题He was in a hurry the other day.Otherwise he ______ (help)you repair the machine.
填空题Thinkaboutwhatwouldmakeyoureally,reallyhappy.Moremoney?Wrong.Smiling,well-adjustedkids?Wrongagain.Thefactisweareterribleatpredictingthesourceofjoy.Andwhateverchoiceswedomake,welikelylaterdecideitwasallforthebest.Theseareinsightsfromhappinesseconomics,perhapsthehottestfieldinwhatusedtobecalledthedismalscience.Happinessiseverywhere--onthebest-sellerlists,inthemindsofpolicymakers,andfrontandcenterforeconomists--yetitremainselusive.Thegoldenroleofeconomicshasalwaysbeenthatwell-beingisasimplefunctionofincome.That'swhynationsandpeoplealikestriveforhigherincomes-moneygivesuschoiceandameasureoffreedom.Afteracertainincomecan,wesimplydon'tgetanyhappier.Anditisn'twhatwehave,butwhetherwehavemorethanourneighbor,thatreallymatters.Sothenewslastweekthatin2006tophedge-fundmanagerstookhome$240million,minimum,probablydidn'tmakethemanyhappier,itjustmadetherestofuslessso.Nowpolicymakersareracingtofigureoutwhatmakespeoplehappy,andjusthowtheyshoulddeliverit.CountriesasdiverseasBhutan,Australia,China,ThailandandtheU.ICarecomingupwith"happinessindexer,"tobeusedalongsideGDPasaguidetosociety'sprogress.InBritain,the"politicsofhappiness"willlikelyfigureprominentlyinnextyear'selections.Nevermindthattheworld'stophappinessresearchersrecentlygatheredataconferenceinRometodebatewhetherjoyisevenmeasurable.Whyisthisallhappeningnow?onlyinthelastdecadehaveeconomists,psychologists,biologistsandphilosophersbeguncross-pollinatinginsuchawaytoarriveat"happinessstudies".HarvardpsychologistDanielGilberthumorouslysumsupmuchofthenewwisdominhisbook"StumblingonHappiness".Hesays24-hourtelevisionandtheInternethaveallowedusalltoseemoreseeminglyhappypeoplethaneverbefore."We'resurroundedbythelifestylesoftherichandfamous,"saysGilbert,"rubbingournosesinthefactthatothershavemore."ofcourse,theideathatmoneyisn'ttherealkeytohappinessisn'tnew.The18th-centryBritishEnlightenmentthinkerJeremyBenthamarguedthatpublicpolicyshouldtryto.maximizehappiness,andmanyprominenteconomistsagreedbutcouldnotquiteembracetheidea.Therewasjustnowaytomeasurehappinessobjectively.oneoftheearlyrevelationsofhappinessresearch,fromRichardEasterlinattheUniversityofSouthernCalifornia,wasthatwhilethericharetypicallyhappierthanthepoor,thehappinessboostfromextracashisn'tthatgreatonceonerisesabovethepovertyline.Thereason,saysEasterlin,isthe"hedoniccycle":wegetusedtobeingricherdamquick,andtakeitforgrantedorcompareittowhatothershave,notwhatweusedtohave.Tumsout,keepingupwiththeJonesesishard-wiredintoourbrains,thankstoourpack-creatureroots.Thoughmanyhappinessresearcherssay"workless,playmore"istheformulaforhappiness,RuutVeenhoven,aprofessoratErasmusUniversityinRotterdam,suggestsotherwise.Hard-workingAmericansranks17thonhislist;thehard-vacationingFrench39th.HumanbeingsdowantaEuropean-stylesafetynet,butalsowantfreedomandopportunity.Andperhapsourintuitionsabouthappinessshouldtriumphoverthefuzzydata,anyway.Theeconomicsofhappinesshasgivenusacoupleoffairlyhardandfastrolesaboutwell-being-beingtrulypoorisbad,andtimewithfriendsandfamilyaregood.Thegoodnewsisthatwhateverchoiceswemakeindividuallyandassocietiesinthepursuitofhappinessthere'sgoodchancethatthey'llseembetterinhindsight.Yetanothertruismofhappinessisthat"weallwearrose-coloredglasseswhenitcomestoourpastdecision-making,"saysGilbert.Today'sdreadfullifechoicewilllikelybetomorrow'shappyaccident.Wearepooratprevisionoftheoriginofhapiness,andwewouldprobablybelievethedecisionwemadeisthemostsatisfactory.TheHappinesshasbecome16everywherebuttoughtodefine.Nationsandpeoplemanagetogainhigherincomesbasedontheprincipleofeconomicsthat17arerelatedtohapiness,butthatisnot18.Wealthaloneisn'tnecessarilywhatmakesushappy.Itmakesdifferentifwepossessmorethan19,andthat'swhywefeelunhappytofindthosetop20havesuperlativeincome.Somenationsarebeginningtoconsiderissueslikemeasuringsociety'sprogressby21aswellasGDP,andresearchersheldseminartoexchangesurveysaboutthe22,thoughtheinfluentialtopicwasadvanced10yearsago.Theissuethatastatepolicyshouldbe23thehappinessofthemajority,eruptedmanydecadesagobyBritishEnlightenmentthinkerJeremyBenthamandacceptedbymanyeminenteconomists,couldnotfairly24,becausehappinesscannotbeobjectivelymeasured.The25ofthehappinessmadebyRichardEasterlinisthatthewealthmakespeoplehappier,buttheirhappinesswillnot26asgreatasitshouldbeiftheyliveabovethe27.Thecaneasilytakethelifeforgrantedand28themoreexpansivewayoflife.Theyare29tocomparethelifewithothersandmanagetokeepupwiththeJoneses.RuutVeenhoven,aprofessoratErasmusUniversityinRotterdam,doesnotsupportthe30"workless,playmore".Accordingtohisinvestigationofhappinesslist,peoplewantaEuropen-style31andwanttoenjoyfreedomandopportunityaswell.Weshouldprobablygobeyondtheconfusinginformationand32thefairlyprinciplesofthehappiness:povertyis33,stayingwithfriendsandfamilyis34,andthedecisionsmade35arebychancetobehappyexperience.
填空题There are three principles of language testing: ______, ______and______.
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填空题Swedish ______ production has increased steadily this year. (industry)
填空题Mike and Adam Hurewitz grew up together on Long Island, in the
suburbs of New York City. They were very close, even for brothers. So when
Adam's liver started failing, Mike offered to give him half of his. The
operation saved Adam's life. But Mike, who went into the hospital in seemingly
excellent health, developed a complication—perhaps a blood colt—and died last
week. He was 57. Mike Hurewitz's death has prompted a lot of soul searching in
the transplant community. Was it a tragic fluke or a sign that transplant
surgery has reached some kind of ethical limit? The Mount Sinai Medical Center,
the New York City hospital where the complex double operation was performed, has
put on hold its adult living donor liver transplant program, pending a review of
Hurewitz's death. Mount Sinai has performed about 100 such operations in the
past three years. A 1-in-100 risk of dying may not seem like
bad odds, but there's more to this ethical dilemma than a simple ratio. The
first and most sacred rule of medicine is to do no harm. "For a normal healthy
person a mortality rate 1% is hard to justify," says Dr. John Fung, chief of
transplantation at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. "If the rate
stays at 1%, it's just not going to be accepted." On the other hand, there's an
acute shortage of traditional donor organs from people who have died in
accidents or suffered fatal heart attacks. If family members fully understand
the risks and are willing to proceed, is there any reason to stand in their way?
Indeed, a recent survey showed that most people will accept a mortality rate for
living organ donors as high as 20%. The odds, thankfully, aren't nearly that
bad. For kidney donors, for example, the risk ranges from 1 in 2,500 to 1 in
4,000 for a healthy volunteer. That helps explain why nearly 40% of kidney
transplants in the U.S. come from living donors The operation to
transplant a liver, however, is a lot trickier than one to transplant a kidney.
Not only is the liver packed with blood vessels, but it also makes lots of
proteins that need to be produced in the right ratios for the body to survive.
When organs from the recently deceased are used, the surgeon gets to pick which
part of the donated liver looks the best and to take as much of it as needed.
Assuming all goes well, a healthy liver can grow back whatever portion of the
organ is missing, sometimes within a month. A living-donor
transplant works particularly well when an adult donates a modest portion of the
liver to a child. Usually only the left lobe of the organ is required, leading
to a mortality rate for living-donors in the neighborhood of 1 in 500 to 1 in 1,
000. But when the recipient is another adult, as much as 60% of the donor's
liver has to be removed. "There really is very little margin for error," says
Dr. Fung. By way of analogy, he suggests, think of a tree. "An adult-to-child
living-donor transplant is like cutting off a limb. With an adult-to-adult
transplant, you're splitting the trunk in half and trying to keep both halves
alive." Even if a potential donor understand and accepts these
risks, that doesn't necessarily mean the operation should proceed. All sorts of
subtle pressures can be brought to bear on such a decision, says Dr. Mark
Siegler, director of the MacLean for Clinical Medical Ethics at the University
of Chicago. "Sometimes the sicker the patient, the greater the pressure and the
more willing the donor will be to accept risks." If you feel you can't say no,
is your decision truly voluntary? And if not, is it the medical community's
responsibility to save you from your own best intentions?
Transplant centers have developed screening programs to ensure that living
donors fully understand the nature of their decision. But unexamined, for the
most part, is the larger issue of just how much a volunteer should be allowed to
sacrifice to save another human being. So far, we seem to be saying some risk is
acceptable, although we're still vaguer about where the cutoff should be. There
will always be family members like Mike Hurewitz who are heroically prepared to
make the ultimate sacrifice for a loved one. What the medical profession and
society must decide is if it's appropriate to let them do so.
填空题If you ______ (do)those exercises, you might have benefited from them.
填空题Scientists will have to ______ new technologies to improve the worlds food and fuel supplies.
填空题Translation practice.Translate the following passage into Chinese.Write your translation on the ANSWER SHEET.The love of beauty is an essential part of all healthy human nature. It is a moral quality. The absence of it is not an assured ground of condemnation, but the presence of it is an invariable sign of goodness of heart. In proportion to the degree in which it is felt will probably be the degree in which nobleness and beauty of character will be attained. Natural beauty is an all-pervading presence. The universe is its temple. It unfolds into the numberless flowers of spring. It waves in the branches of trees and the green blades of grass. It haunts the depths of the earth and the sea. It gleams from the hues of the shell and the precious stone. And not only these minute objects but the oceans, the mountains, the clouds, the stars, the rising and the setting sun—all overflow with beauty. This beauty is so precious , and so congenial to our tenderest and noblest feelings, that it is painful to think of the multitude of people living in the midst of it and yet remaining almost blind to it.
填空题She wants to drop out of college and become a singer, but her parents ______ very much her intention.
