单选题The high school my daughter studies in is______our university.
单选题The passage implies that there are many senses we ______.
单选题A: Bob, would you mind turning down the TV a little? I'm talking on the phone, and I'm having a hard time hearing. B: ______
单选题______that I wasn't going to get much chance for promotion, I decided to quit the job.
单选题Ray: ______. Where was I? Brenda: You were talking
about your trip to South Africa.
A. Let's back up.
B. What did I hear?
C. Let's check in.
D. What were you talking about?
单选题He was charged by the police ______ breaking the law.
单选题{{B}}Passage Two{{/B}}
In June of 1973, nine whales beached on
the Florida coast. Beaching means swimming out of the ocean onto the beach, and
usually dying there. No one knows why they do it, but a number of whales beach
themselves every year. Some people think beaching is an accident.
Perhaps the whales get confused. Scientists who studied the beaching of
three dozen whales in Australia think the whales may have been confused by loud
noises, Whales can tell where they are by sounds. They send out sounds and
listen as they travel past or bounce off objects. Two days before these
thirty-six whales beached, loud guns had been fired for two hours. The loud
sounds may have confused the whales. Their confusion might have caused them to
wander into low water. Whatever the reason whales beach, it is a
sad event. People try to save them, but very few beached whales live. One
whale that was rescued from beaching in Florida lived for forty-five days. That
is the longest a beached whale has ever survived. And it lived that long only
because it got attention from doctors. All over the world,
scientists rush to whale beachings as soon as they hear about them. They hope to
learn why whales beach, and how to save them.
单选题Bond realized that he was being followed by means of ______. ( )
单选题
单选题Everyday there are reports of______ that have been committed against innocent people.
单选题{{B}} Directions: For each blank in the following passage, there
are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that is most suitable and
mark your answer by blackening the corresponding letter on ANSWER SHEET
I.{{/B}}
Football is the most popular sport{{U}}
(21) {{/U}}the fall in the United States. The game originated as
a(an){{U}} (22) {{/U}}sport more than seventy-five years ago. It is
still played by almost every college and university in the country, and the
football stadiums of some of the largest universities{{U}} (23) {{/U}}as
many as g0,000 people. The game is not the same{{U}} (24) {{/U}}European
football. There are eleven players in each team, and{{U}} (25) {{/U}}in
padded uniforms because the game is rough and injuries are likely to occur.
The{{U}} (26) {{/U}}of the game is to carry or throw from one per- son
to another the ball across the opponent's goal, or scoring line. He{{U}}
(27) {{/U}}has not attended a large college football game{{U}}
(28) {{/U}}missed one of the most colorful aspects of American college
life.{{U}} (29) {{/U}}the two halves of the game, the playing field if
taken over by the bands (乐队) of the rival institutions,{{U}} (30)
{{/U}}take turns doing intricate marches and executing interesting
formations. The student spectators are led in cheering for their team by
trained, uniformed student cheerleaders,{{U}} (31) {{/U}}are pretty
girls. Outstanding high school football players{{U}} (32) {{/U}}usually
encouraged to come to a college and university{{U}} (33) {{/U}}offers of
scholarships and free room and board. Football is{{U}} (34)
{{/U}}popular and the urge to win is so keen, that many colleges actively{{U}}
(35) {{/U}}outstanding players for their student body. Attendance at
football games is so large that it is not unheard of for a college or university
to finance its entire athletic program from ticket
sales.
单选题Hippies were members of a youth movement of the 1960's and 1970's that started in the United States and spread to Canada, Great Britain, and many other countries. The hippies rejected the customs, traditions, and life styles of society and tried to develop those of their own. Most hippies came from white middle-class families and ranged in age from 15 to 25 years old. They thought too many adults cared about making money and little else. The term hippie may come from the word hip, which means "turned-in" or aware. Hippies wanted a world based on love of humanity and peace. Many believed that wonderful, magical changes were about to take place. They thought these changes would happen as soon as people learned to express their feelings honestly and to behave naturally at all times. Hippies strongly opposed U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War. Many hippies lived together in small groups, working with one another and sharing possessions. Others refused to be tied down to a fixed job or home. They wandered from place to place seeking part-time work and temporary shelter. Some begged for spare change and lived in the streets or camped in parks or other public lands. Hippies were sometimes called "flower children" because they gave people flowers to communicate gentleness and love. They let their hair grow long and walked barefoot or in sandals. Hippies attracted public attention by wearing clothing that featured unusual combinations of colors and textures. A large number of hippies used marijuana, LSD, and other drugs. Drug experiences shaped many of their symbols and ideas. The Beatles, a popular English rock group, helped spread the hippie movement with their song. Hippie favorites included such other rock groups as the Grateful Dead and the Jefferson Airplane, singers Joan Baez and Bob Dylan, poet Allen Ginsberg, and novelist Ken Kesey. Many hippies admired Timothy Leary, a psychologist who preached salvation through the use of drugs. In time, most hippies realized it was not easy to reform society by "dropping'out" of it. Some joined more organized political movements to work for specific social causes. Others turned to spirituality or religion. The majority simply left the hippie stage of their lives behind while trying to hold on to at least a few of the ideals that once inspired them.
单选题Human greenhouse gas emissions which cause low-lying places to disappear are mainly let out by
单选题
单选题In the last paragraph, the author implies that ______.
单选题Thousands of A(tired, underfed, poorly clothed) Confederate soldiers,B( long since past)the simple enthusiasm of the early days of the struggle C(somehow) considered Lee the symbol of everything D(that) they had been willing to die.
单选题If humans use up too much soil—which they have often done and are doing—then they will starve down to the carrying capacity of their habitat. This is nature's "indifferent"
单选题Pedants are inclined to made ______ distinctions so they can show off their learning.
单选题Roy, who was supposed to on a diet, kept making ______ trips to the kitchen to nibbleon this and that, whenever he thought no one would notice.
单选题Bill Clinton — one of the______American presidents gave a speech last week in Oxford University.
