单选题While traveling for various speaking engagements, I frequently stay overnight in the home of a family and am invited to one of the children's bedrooms. In it, I often find so many playthings that there's almost no room. And the closet is usually so tightly packed with clothes that I can barely squeeze in my jacket. I' m not complaining, only making a point. I think that the tendency to give children an overabundance (过多) of toys and clothes is quite common in American families, and I think that in far too many families not only do children come to take their parents' generosity for granted, but also the effects of this can actually be somewhat harmful to children. Of course, I' m not only thinking of the material possessions children are given. Children can also be overindulged (过分宠爱) with too many privileges—for example, when parents send a child to an expensive summer camp that the parents can't really afford. Why? One fairly common reason is that parents overindulge their children out of a sense of guilt. Parents who both hold down full-time jobs may feel guilty about the amount of time they spend away from their children and may attempt to compensate by showering them with material possessions. Overindulgence of a child also happens when parents are unable to stand up to their children's unreasonable demands. Such parents vacillate between saying no and giving in—but neither response seems satisfactory to them. If they refuse a request, they immediately feel a wave of remorse for having been so strict or ungenerous. If they give in, they feel regret and resentment over having been a pushover. This kind of vacillation not only impairs the parents' ability to set limits, it also sours the parent-child relationship to some degree, robbing parents and their children of some of the happiness and mutual respect that should be present in healthy families. But overindulging children with material things does little to lessen parental guilt (since parents never feel that they've given enough), nor does it make children feel more loved (for what children really crave is parents' time and attention). Instead, the effects of overindulgence can be harmful. Children may, to some degree become greedy, self-centered, ungrateful and insensitive to the needs and feelings of others, beginning with their parents. When children are given too much, their respect for their parents would be undermined.
单选题In new semester, there will be many activities ______ campus.
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单选题Speaker A. Excuse me, Mr. Black, can you spare me a few minutes? There's something I'd like to speak to you about. I won't keep you long.Speaker B: ______
单选题Why! I have nothing to confess, ______ you want me to say?
单选题Like so many things of value, truth is not always easy to come by. What we regard as true shapes our beliefs, attitudes, and actions. Yet we can believe things that have no basis in fact. People are capable of embracing horrific precepts that seem incredible in retrospect. In Nazi Germany, Adolf Hitler had millions of followers who accepted his delusions about racial superiority. As Voltaire put it long before Hitler's time, "Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. " We are surrounded by illusions, some created deliberately. They may be subtle or may affect us profoundly. Some illusions, such as films and novels, we seek out and appreciate. Others can make us miserable and even kill us. We need to know if particular foods that taste perfectly fine can hurt us in the short term (as with Salmonella contamination) or in the long term (cholesterol), whether a prevalent virus is so dangerous that we should avoid public places, and what problems a political candidate may cause or resolve if elected. Gaining insights about the truth often is a challenge, and misconceptions can be difficult to recognize. We often believe stories because they are the ones available. Most people would identify Thomas Edison as the inventor of the incandescent light bulb. Although Edison perfected a commercially successful design, he was preceded in the experimentation by British inventors Frederick de Moleyns and Joseph Swan, and by American J. W. Starr. The biggest enemies of truth are: people whose job is to sell us incomplete versions of the available facts, our willingness to believe what we want and the simple absence of accurate information. Companies advertising products on television do not describe the advantages of their competitors' products any more than a man asking a woman to marry him encourages her to date other men before making up her mind. It is a social reality that people encourage one another to make important decisions with limited facts. Technology has simplified and complicated the fact-gathering process. The Internet allows us to check facts more easily, but it also disburses misinformation. Similarly, a belief that videos and photos necessarily represent reality ignores how easily they can be digitally altered. Unquestioning reliance on such forms of media makes us more susceptible to manipulators: those who want to deceive can dazzle us with a modern version of smoke and mirrors.
单选题Let's hang up some paintings on these ______ walls.
单选题Husband: Tell you what, dear. I just got promoted.
Wife: Really? ______
A. Take it easy.
B. It's unexpected.
C. You'll work hard later on, I guess.
D. Oh, I'm thrilled.
单选题In a materialistic and ______ society people's interest seems to be focused solely on monetary pursuit. A. adaptive B. addictive C. acquisitive D. arrogant
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单选题The idea (that) learning is (a) lifelong process (has expressed) by philosophers and educationalists (throughout) the centuries.
单选题The process by means of which human beings arbitrarily make certain things stand for other things may be called the symbolic process.
Everywhere we turn, we see the symbolic process at work. There are
1
things men do or want to do, possess or want to possess, that have not a symbolic value.
Almost all fashionable clothes are
2
symbolic, so is food. We
3
our furniture to serve
4
visible symbols of our taste, wealth, and social position. We often choose our houses
5
the basis of a feeling that it "looks well" to have a "good address". We trade perfectly good cars in for
6
models not always to get better transportation, but to give
7
to the community that we can
8
it.
Such complicated and apparently
9
behavior leads philosophers to ask over and over again, "why can"t human beings
10
simply and naturally?" Often the complexity of human life makes us look enviously at the relative
11
of such lives as dogs and cats. Simply, the fact that symbolic process makes complexity possible is no
12
for wanting to
13
to a cat-and-dog existence. A better solution is to understand the symbolic process
14
instead of being its slaves we become, to some degree at least, its
15
.
单选题This style of writing, incidentally, is Usuggestive/U of what is called the "newsreel technique" of John Dos Passos.
单选题Universal Grammar refers to the principles and properties that pertain to the grammars of all human languages.(对外经贸2005研)
单选题He doesn't work but he gets a good______from his investments.
单选题 {{B}}Directions: {{/B}} In this part there are four
passages, each followed with five questions or unfinished statements. For each
of them, there are four suggested answers. Choose the one that you think is the
best answer. Mark your {{B}}ANSWER SHEET{{/B}} by drawing with a pencil a short bar
across the corresponding letter in the brackets.{{B}}11-15{{/B}}
For an increasing number of students at
American universities, Old is suddenly in. The reason is obvious: the graying of
America means jobs. Coupled with the aging of the baby-boom (生育高峰) generation, a
longer life span means that the nation's elderly population is bound to expand
significantly over the next 40 years. By 2040, 25 percent of all Americans will
be older than 65, up from 14 percent in 1995. The change poses profound
questions for government and society, of course. But it also creates career
opportunities in medicine and health professions, and in law and business as
well. "In addition to the doctors, we're going to need more sociologists,
biologists, urban planners and specialized lawyers," says Professor Edward
Schneider of the University of Southern California's (USC) School of Gerontology
(老年学). Lawyers can specialize in "elder law", which covers
everything from masts and estates to nursing-home abuse and age discrimination
(歧视). Businessmen see huge opportunities in the elder market because the baby
boomers, 74 million strong, are likely to be the wealthiest group of retirees in
human history. "Any student who combines an expert knowledge in gerontology
with, say, an MBA or law degree, will have a license to print money," one
professor says. Margarite Santos is a 21-year-old senior at USC.
She began college as a biology major but found she was "really bored with
bacteria." So she took a class in gerontology and discovered that she liked it.
She says, "I did volunteer work in retirement homes and it was very
satisfying."
单选题Jason has been preparing carefully for his English examination so that he could be sure of passing it at his first ______.A. purposeB. desireC. attemptD. intention
单选题The author mentions folding chairs in the first paragraph in order to ______.
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Stratford-on-Avon, as we all know, has
only one industry--William Shakespeare--but there are two distinctly separate
and increasingly hostile branches. There is the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC),
which presents superb productions of the plays at the Shakespeare Memorial
Theatre on the Avon. And there are the townsfolk who largely live off the
tourists who come, not to see the plays, but to look at Anne Hathaway's Cottage,
Shakespeare's birthplace and the other sights. The worthy
residents of Stratford doubt that the theatre adds a penny to their revenue.
They frankly dislike the RSC's actors ,them with their long hair and beards and
sandals and noisiness. It's all deliciously ironic when you consider that
Shakespeare, who earns their living, was himself an actor(with a beard)and did
his share of noise-making. The tourist streams are not entirely
separate. The sightseers who come by bus-and often take in Warwick Castle and
Blenheim Palace on the side--don't usually see the plays, and some of them are
even surprised to find a theatre in Stratford. However, the playgoers do manage
a little sightseeing along with their playgoing. It is the playgoers, the RSC
contends, who bring in much of the town's revenue because they spend the
night(some of them four or five nights)pouring cash into the hotels and
restaurants. The sightseers can take in everything and get out of town by
nightfall.. The townsfolk don't see it this way and local
council does not contribute directly to the subsidy of the Royal Shakespeare
Company. Stratford cries poor traditionally. Nevertheless every hotel in town
seems to be adding a new wing or cocktail lounge. Hilton is building its own
hotel there, which you may be sure will be decorated with Hamlet Hamburger Bars,
the Lear Lounge, the Banquo Banqueting Room, and so forth, and will be very
expensive. Anyway, the townsfolk can't understand why the Royal
Shakespeare Company needs a subsidy. (The theatre has broken attendance records
for three years in a row. Last year its 1,431 seats were 94 per cent occupied
all year long and this year they'll do better.) The reason, of course, is that
costs have rocketed and ticket prices have stayed low. It would
be a shame to raise prices too much because it would drive away the young people
who are Stratford's most attractive clientele. They come entirely for the plays,
not the sights. They all seem to look alike (though they come from all
over)--lean, pointed, dedicated faces, wearing jeans and sandals, eating their
buns and bedding down for the night on the flagstones outside the theatre to buy
the 20 seats and 80 standing-room tickets held for the sleepers and sold to them
when the box of rice opens at 10:30am.
单选题In bringing up children, every parent watches eagerly the child's acquisition (学会) of each new skill—the first spoken words, the first independent steps, or the beginning of reading and writing. It is often tempting to hurry the child beyond his natural learning rate, but this can set up dangerous feelings of failure and states of worry in the child. This might happen at any stage. A baby might be forced to use a toilet too early, a young child might be encouraged to learn to read before he knows the meaning of the words he reads. On the other hand, though, if a child is left alone too much, or without any learning opportunities, he loses his natural enthusiasm for life and his desire to find out new things for himself. Parents vary greatly in their degree of strictness towards their children. Some may be especially strict in money matters. Others are severe over times of coming home at night or punctuality for meals. In general, the controls imposed represent the needs of the parents and the values of the community as much as the child's own happiness. As regards the development of moral standards in the growing child, consistency is very important in parental teaching. To forbid a thing one day and exeuse it the next is no foundation for morality (道德). Also, parents should realize that "example is better than precept". If they are not sincere and do not practise what they preach (说教), their children may grow confused, and emotionally insecure when they grow old enough to think for themselves, and realize they have been to some extent fooled. A sudden awareness of a marked difference between their parents principles and their morals can be a dangerous disappointment.
