单选题He was fired by his boss last week, because he ______ his duty.
单选题
A. foll{{U}}ow{{/U}}
B. thr{{U}}ow{{/U}}
C. someh{{U}}ow{{/U}}
D. bl{{U}}ow{{/U}}
单选题W: What would you do if you were in my place?M: If Paul were my son, I'd just not worry. Now that his teacher is giving him extra help and he is working hard himself, he's sure to do well in the next exam.Q: What's the man's suggestion to the woman? A. Teaching her son by herself. B. Having confidence in her son. C. Asking the teacher for extra help. D. Telling her son not to worry.
单选题Before the invention of refrigeration, the ______ of fish and meat must have been a problem.
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}}
A pet is an animal that{{U}} (21)
{{/U}}in your house. Over half the families in North America own pets. The
most popular{{U}} (22) {{/U}}axe dogs, fish and birds. Rabbits, hamsters
and turtles are also popular.{{U}} (23) {{/U}}some unpopular animals
such as frogs, mice and snakes are pets. People first{{U}}
(24) {{/U}}to keep pets about 12,000 years ago. The first pet was a
dog. The dog{{U}} (25) {{/U}}not become a pet because people{{U}}
(26) {{/U}}it was cute. It{{U}} (27) {{/U}}a pet because it
was useful. People used the dog for many things. The dog warned people{{U}}
(28) {{/U}}danger so wild animals didn't attack people. It also ate
leftover food. Later, dogs helped people take care{{U}} (29) {{/U}}cows
and sheep on farms. Cats did not{{U}} (30) {{/U}}pets
for a long time. When the Egyptians first{{U}} (31) {{/U}}to grow grain,
mice ate it. The Egyptians were{{U}} (32) {{/U}}to tame cats.
Today, people keep many{{U}} (33) {{/U}}of pets. Animals such as
canaries, parrots, mice and hamsters live in cages. They need people to bring
them food and water and to keep their cages clean. Other animals, such as dogs
and cats, need food and water, but they{{U}} (34) {{/U}}take care of
themselves{{U}} (35) {{/U}}. They are good pets for people because they
don't need much care.
单选题{{B}}Passage Three{{/B}}
People use money to buy food, books,
bicycles and hundreds of other things they need. When they work, they usually
get paid in money. Most of the money used today is made of metal
or paper. But in ancient times people used to use all kinds of things as money.
One of the first kinds of money was shells. In China, cloth and
knives were used as money. Elephant tusks, monkey tails and salt were used in
some parts of Africa. Rice was also a kind of money used by the ancient people
in some islands. Cows and other animals were used as money, too.
The first copper coins were made in China. They were round and had a
square hole in the centre. Different counties had used different metals for
their money. Later some countries began to make Coins of gold and silver. But
gold and silver were heavy to carry when people need a lot of coins to buy
something expensive. The Chinese were the first to use paper money. The first
paper money looked more like a note from one paper to another than the paper
money used today.
单选题In an age of perpetual digital connectedness, why do people seem so disconnected? In a Duke University study, researchers found that from 1985 to 2004, the percentage of people who said there was no one with whom they discussed important matters tripled, to 25%; the same study found that overall, Americans had one-third fewer friends and confidants than they did two decades ago. Another recent study, by researchers at the University of Michigan, found that college students today have significantly less empathy than students of generations past did. The reason, psychologists speculate, may have something to do with our increasing reliance on digital communication and other forms of new media. It's possible that instead of fostering real friendships off-line, e-mail and social networking may take the place of them—and the distance inherent in screen-only interactions may breed feelings of isolation or a tendency to care less about other people. After all, if you don't feel like dealing with a friend's problem online, all you have to do is log off. The problem is, as empathy wanes, so does trust. And without trust, you can't have a cohesive society. Consider the findings of a new study co-authored by Kevin Rockmann of George Mason University and Gregory Northcraft at the University of Illinois who specializes in workplace collaboration. Northcraft says high-tech communications like e-mail and (to a lesser extent) videoconferencing—which are sometimes known as "lean communication" because they have fewer cues like eye contact and posture for people to rely on—strip away the personal interaction needed to breed trust. In a business setting—as in all other social relationships outside the workplace—trust is a necessary condition for effective cooperation within a group. "Technology has made us much more efficient but much less effective," said Northcraft in a statement. "Something is being gained, but something is being lost. The something gained is time, and the something lost is the quality of relationships. And quality of relationships matters." In Rockmann and Northcraft's study, 200 students were divided into teams and asked to manage two complicated projects: one having to do with nuclear disarmament; the other, price fixing. Some groups communicated via e-mail, some via videoconference and others face to face. In the end, those who met in person showed the most trust and most effective cooperation; those using e-mail were the least able to work together and get the job done. Northcraft thinks this is because real-life meetings, during which participants can see how engaged their colleagues are, breed more trust. Over e-mail, meanwhile, confirmation of hard work gets lost, which tends to encourage mutual slacking off.
单选题It took ______ for the world to increase its population from 1 billion to 4 billion.
单选题"Sorry I forgot to post the letter for you."" ______. I'll post it myself tonight." A. Never mind B. No matter C. That's good D. Not care
单选题Many superstitious people are afraid of black cats. They believe that black cats have a strange power. If a black cat crosses their path, they think they will have bad luck. Black cats haven't always had such a bad reputation. Long ago, the Egyptians thought that black cats were holy animals. They even worshipped them. Pasht was an Egyptian goddess who had a woman's body and a cat's head. Because the Egyptians had so much respect for black cats, they often buried the sacred creatures with great ceremony. Mummies of cats have often been found in ancient cemetery ruins. To keep the cats company after they died, mice were sometimes buried beside them. Feelings about black cats have always been strong. People have thought they were either very good or very bad. The people of Europe, in the Middle Ages, believed black cats were the evil friends of witches and the Devil. Witches were said to have the power to change themselves into black cats. People believed that you could not tell whether a black cat was just a cat, or whether it was a witch disguising herself as she plotted some evil scheme. The brain of a black cat was thought to be a main ingredient in witch's brew. Unlike their ancestors of the Middle Ages, Englishmen today consider black cats to be good luck charms. Fishermen's wives often keep a black cat around so that their husbands will be protected when they are out at sea.
单选题Now, we should like to discuss again this question of acting as your ______ agent in Sweden. A.sale B.sole C.solo D.sell
单选题Text 1 Among Bloomberg's web pages on April 7th appeared a story that looked ordinary enough: PairGain, an American telecom equipment manufacturer, was to be bought by an Israeli company for about twice its market value. The company's stock price, predictably, rocketed from $8.50 to $11.13. All fine and normal—except that the story wasn't true. Somebody had copied Bloomberg's logo and layout and posted a bogus report on the Bloomberg site. When Pair Gain queried the report, it was taken off, and the share price crashed again. Bloomberg is now suing unnamed parties who posted the page. As more and more of life moves on to the Internet, so the difficulty of distinguishing fact from fiction on it becomes more and more of a worry. This problem springs from the Internet's central virtue: low barriers to entry. In the real world, being a publisher costs a great deal of money. You have to have manufacturing facilities and distribution networks. So real-world publishers have a great deal invested in their reputations and consequently need to be careful about what they print. On the Internet, being a publisher costs next to nothing. Many Internet publishers, therefore, have little to lose from printing untruths and plenty to gain in notoriety if the story they put out is sensational enough. What's more, faking the real-world newspaper, which has to be both manufactured and distributed, would be next to impossible; faking an Internet page is dead easy. Not all the efforts of the lowering of the barriers to entry are bad. Big, established news organisations can be too cautious and too protective of their more powerful sources. Many scandals have been unearthed first by outsiders with scrappy news sheets and little to lose by way of influential contacts. The Internet is a golden age for what used to be the newsletter. The downside is the ease with which error spreads. Rarely, though, falsehood takes the form of international fraud, more often it appears as malicious gossip, slovenly reporting and Chinese whispers. Last year everybody on the Internet knew that Tommy Hilfiger, a fashion designer, had made racist comments on the Operah Winfrey Show. Except that he didn't. Pierre Salinger, former television newsman, claimed at a news conference that TWA 800, a passenger plane that crashed into the Atlantic killing all aboard in 1996, had been downed by a missile—all on the basis of a web page of dubious origin. Mary Schmich of the Chicago Tribune wrote her column one week as a spoof graduation speech. Somehow this column became tagged on the web, as Kurt Vonnegut's commencement speech at MIT. Cyberspace can also be risky, for now, because even sophisticated people can be gullible about what they read there. This may be because of a lag between technology and perception. Smartly produced pages, and things on screens, impress us with an authority that springs from the resources needed to produce them in the old paper medium. Perhaps everyone should be more worldly wise about what can turn up on the web.
单选题______, he is not a very bright pupil. A. As far as his intelligence is concerned B. As far his intelligence is concerned C. So his intelligence is concerned D. As far as his intelligence are concerned
单选题If you want to pass the exam, you should change your attitude ______ learning.
单选题Having come from an {{U}}affluent{{/U}} society, Dick found it difficult to adjust to a small, country town.
单选题General Wolfe died in ______.
单选题{{B}}Text 4{{/B}}
Most of us have seen a dog staring at,
sometimes snarling at, and approaching a reflection of itself. For most animals,
seeing their own image in a mirror acts as a social stimulus. But does the dog
recognize itself, or does the reflection simply signal a potential companion or
threat? This question is interesting for a number of masons. Apart from
curiosity about the level of animals' understanding, research on serf-
recognition in animals has several benefits. It provides some insight into the
evolutionary significance of this skill of serf-recognition and into the level
and kinds of cognitive competence that the skill requires. Such research also
indicates the kinds of learning experiences that determine the development of
self-recognition. In addition, work with animals fosters the use of techniques
that are not dependent on verbal responses and that may therefore be suitable
for use with preverbal children. The evidence indicates that
dogs and almost all other nonhumans do not recognize themselves. In a series of
clever experiments, however, Gallup has shown that the chimpanzee does have this
capacity. Gallup exposed chimpanzees in a small cage to a full-length mirror for
ten consecutive days. It was observed that over this period of time the number
of serf-directed responses increased. These behaviors included grooming parts of
the body while watching the results, guiding fingers in the mirror, and picking
at teeth with the aid of the mirror. Describing one chimp, Gallup said, "Marge
used the mirror to play with and inspect the bottom of her feet; she also looked
at herself upside down in the mirror while suspended by her feet from the top of
the cage; she was also observed to stuff celery leaves up her nose using the
mirror for purposes of visually guiding the stems into each nostril."
Then the researchers devised a further test of serf-recognition. The
chimps were anesthetized and marks were placed over their eyebrows and behind
their ears, areas the chimps could not directly observe. The mirror was
temporarily removed from the cage, and baseline data regarding their attempts in
touch these areas were recorded. The data clearly suggest that chimps do
recognize themselves, or are self-aware, for their attempts to touch the marks
increased when they viewed themselves. Citing further evidence for this
argument, Gallup noted that chimpanzees with no prior mirror experience did not
direct behavior to the marks when they were first exposed to the mirror; that
is, the other chimpanzees appeared to have remembered what they looked like and
do have responded to the marks because they noticed changes in their
appearance.
单选题Our point is that nuclear science should be developed to benefit people ______ harm them.
单选题— Your ______, please! — Why don't you ring and ask Mr. King inside the hall? It was he who asked me to come to the party.A. foodB. moneyC. invitationD. suggestion
单选题
{{B}}Bookkeeper Wanted{{/B}}
Job type
Temp
Full time/Part time
Full -Time
Diploma/Degree required
Associates
Salary/Pay rate
Please contact us for more information.
Job description/qualifications
Adecco is looking for Bookkeepers to work for top companies. These are
long-term temporary positions with the possibility of temp to hire. Job
responsibilities include processing accounts payable and accounts
receivable.Prepare and post monthly and yearly journal entries.Process
payroll, and some light administrative
work.{{B}}Qualifications:{{/B}}Three years experienceExcellent
communication skillsSolid organizational skillsStrong analytical and
problem-solving skillsMicrosoft ExcelQuickbooksAdecco is a
global leader in employment and HR service, connecting people to jobs and jobs
to people through its network of more than 6,000 offices in 71
countries/territories around the world. Our temporary and full-time assignments
offer competitive pay and excellent benefits. Adecco is an equal
opportunity employer.
Contact Information
Adecco San Mateo Branch1065 E. Hillsdale Blvd.Foster City,
CA 94404Phone: 650-350-1308E-mail: sanmateo@
adeccona.com
