单选题A. matterB. gatherC. fatherD. rapid
单选题The doctor tried last time to explain to the Browns that infants and young children are more ______to the effects of secondhand smoke than adults.
单选题{{B}}Text 4{{/B}}
Watching a three-and-a-half-pound
chicken roast in 14 minutes, time loses all meaning. The skin turns gold and
crisp, juices immediately rise to the surface, and the flesh firms before your
eyes. It's dizzying and seductive, like the home makeovers on TV that compress
as "Wow." you think "I could do this every single night." The
makers of the TurboChef, a super-fast oven, used at Subway and Starbucks and,
recently, by chefs like Charlie Trotter and Gray Kurtz, are banking on that
reaction. Speed ovens made by TurboChef, Merrychef. Electrolux and others are
common in commercial kitchens: they generally use some layering of microwave,
convection, steam and infrared technologies, which provides even cooking,
moistness and browning, all at high speed. No single technology has been able m
produce all of those traits. The combination ovens are also
mining up. in more limited roles, in some fine-dining kitchens. Mr. Trotter
installed a commercial TurboChef in his upscale takeout cafe, Trotter's to Go.
in Chicago about six years ago. Mr. Kurtz says that his speed oven is used
mostly for souffi6s, reducing the cooking time from 25 minutes to 2.
"I liked .taking that line off the menu where you have to order the
souffi6 at the beginning of the meal," he said. This is hardly an everyday
concern for home cooks. But manufacturers are unable to resist the lure of the
lucrative residential market: companies like Electrolux. G.E. and Sharp already
sell speed ovens for home cooks. TurboChef, however, has put an
unusual amount of research and design energy into adapting its product for
residential use. It will be introduced next month, priced at $5,995 for a solo
unit and $7.895 for a TurboChef combined with a conventional oven. The company
is pitching—hard—the notion that its appliance will do no less than
revolutionize American home cooking. "I can't imagine a home
cook who wouldn't respond to the speed of this oven," said Mr. Trotter. who has
become a consultant and spokesman for TurboChef. "But speed alone wouldn't
validate it. The results are glorious." Glorious is a strong
word. So last week, I hauled raw chickens and a jug of souffle batter over to
TurboChef's New York office for a road test. Three hours later,
it was clear that the technology used by TurboChef—a combination of high-speed
convection for rapid heat transfer and browning, plus "controlled bursts" of
microwave for moist, even cooking—is far more successful for actual cooking than
a microwave alone
单选题The man who invented Coca-Cola was not a native Atlantan, but on the day of his funeral every drugstore in town testimonially shut up shop. He was John Styth Pemberton, born in 1831 in Knoxville, Georgia, eighty miles away. Sometimes known as Doctor, Pemberton was a pharmacist who, during the Civil War, led a cavalry troop under General Joe Wheeler. He settled in Atlanta in 1869, and soon began brewing such patent medicines as Triplex Liver Pills and Globe of Flower Cough Syrup. In 1885, he registered a trade- mark for something called French Wine Coca Ideal Nerve and Tonic Stimulant; a few months later be formed the Pemberton Chemical Company and recruited the services of a bookkeeper named Frank M. Robinson, who not only had a good head for figures but, attached to it, so exceptional a nose that he could audit the composition of a batch of syrup merely by sniffling it. In 1886--year in which, as contemporary Coca-Cola officials like to point out, Conan Doyle unveiled Sherlock Holmes and France unveiled the Statue of Liberty-Pemberton unveiled a syrup that he called Coca-Cola. It Was a modification of his French Wine Coca. He had taken out the wine and added a pinch of caffeine, and, when the end product tasted awful, had thrown in some extract of cola nut and a few other oils, blending the mixture in a three-legged iron pot in his back yard and swishing it around with an oar. He distributed it to soda fountains in used beer bottles, and Robinson, with his flowing bookkeeper's script, presently devised a label, on which "Coca-Cola" was writ- ten in the fashion that is still employed. Pemberton looked upon his mixture less as a refreshment than as a headache cure, especially for people whose headache could be traced to over-indulgence. On a morning late in 1886, one such victim of the night before dragged himself into an Atlanta drugstore and asked for a dollop of Coca-cola. Druggists customarily stirred a tea- spoonful of syrup into a glass of water, but in this instance the man on duty was too lazy to walk to the fresh-water tap, a couple of feet off. Instead, he mixed the syrup with some soda water, which was closer at hand. The suffering customer perked up almost at once, and word quickly spread that the best Coca-Cola was a fizzy one.
单选题The sea is the common property of all nations. It belongs equally to all. None can appropriate it exclusively to themselves; nor is it "foreign" to any.
This was the decision of John Marshall, chief justice of the United States from 1801 to 1835. It was stated as a fundamental rule of the sea that no one, and therefore everyone, owns the ocean. This means that outside territorial waters (the waters within three miles of a country"s coast), the law is whatever nations agree on in peacetime and whatever the strongest naval powers can enforce in wartime.
After the United States purchased Alaska, Americans began to seize Canadians who were hunting seals outside Alaskan territorial waters. The Americans claimed that the seals were American property because they often came in to the Alaskan shores owned by the United States. International arbitrators disagreed with this reasoning. In some cases, however, the special rights of a nation that makes use of an open-sea area are recognized.
All of the sea"s rules of the road are established by international conferences and treaties.
单选题Anne Whitney, a sophomore at Colorado State University, first had a problem taking test when she began college. "I was always well prepared for my tests. Sometimes I studied for weeks before a test. Yet I would go in to take the test, only to find I could not answer the questions correctly. I would blank out because of nervousness and fear. I couldn't think of the answer. My low grades on the tests did not show what I knew to the teacher." Another student in microbiology had similar experiences. He said, "My first chemistry test was very difficult. Then, on the second test, I sat down to take it, and I was so nervous that I was shaking. My hands were moving up and down so quickly that it was hard to hold my pencil. I knew the material and I knew the answers. Yet I couldn't even write them down." These two young students were experiencing something called test anxiety. Because a student worries and is uneasy about a test, his or her mind does not work as well as it usually does. The student cannot write or think clearly because of the extreme tension and nervousness. Although poor grades are often a result of poor study habits, sometimes test anxiety causes the low grades. Recently, test anxiety has been recognized as a real problem, not just an excuse or a false explanation of lazy students. Special university counseling courses try to help students. In these courses, counselors try to help students by teaching them how to manage test anxiety. At some universities, students take tests to measure their anxiety. If the tests show their anxiety is high, the students can take short courses to help them deal with their tension. These courses teach students how to relax their bodies. Students are trained to become calm in very tense situations. By controlling their nervousness, they can let their minds work easy. Learned information then comes out without difficulty on a test. An expert at the University of California explains, "With almost all students, relaxation and less stress are felt after taking our program. Most of them experience better control during their tests. Almost all have some improvement. With some, the improvement is very great./
单选题
单选题Greg sells gaskets. On three sales, Greg has received commissions of $385, $70, and $190, and he has one additional sale pending. If Greg is to receive an average (arithmetic mean) commission of exactly $220 on the four sales, then the fourth commission must be: A. $135 B. $155 C. $220 D. $235 E. $645
单选题Now, let' s not______ the job. The work must be finished by tomorrow morning.
单选题In the early 20th century Americans believed science and technology could ______.
单选题In order to keep their mother living with them confidently, the couple______leave the washing-up for her after meals.
单选题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}}Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for
each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D on ANSWER SHEET 1.
Speech, whether oral or written, is a
used commodity. If we are to be heard, we must {{U}}(1) {{/U}} our words
from those {{U}}(2) {{/U}} to us within families, peer groups, societal
institutions, and political networks. Our utterances position us both in an
immediate social dialogue {{U}}(3) {{/U}} our addressee and,
simultaneously, in a larger ideological one {{U}}(4) {{/U}} by history
and society. We speak as an individual and also, as a student or teacher, a
husband or wife, a person of a particular discipline, social class, religion,
race, or other socially constructed {{U}}(5) {{/U}}. Thus, to varying
degrees, all speaking is a {{U}}(6) {{/U}} of others' words and all
writing is rewriting. As language {{U}}(7) {{/U}}, we experience
individual agency by infusing our own intentions {{U}}(8) {{/U}} other
people's words, and this can be very hard. {{U}} (9)
{{/U}}, schools, like into churches and courtrooms, are places {{U}}(10)
{{/U}} people speak words that are more important than they are. The words
of a particular discipline, like those of "God the father" or of "the law," are
being articulated by spokespeople for the given authority. The {{U}}(11)
{{/U}} of the addressed, the listener, is to acknowledge the words and their
{{U}}(12) {{/U}}. In Bakhtin's {{U}}(13) {{/U}}, "the
authoritative word is located in a distanced zone, organically connected with a
{{U}}(14) {{/U}} that is felt to be hierarchally higher."
{{U}} (15) {{/U}}, part of growing up in an ideological sense is
becoming more "selective" about the words we appropriate and, {{U}}(16)
{{/U}}, pass on to others. In Bakhtin's {{U}}(17) {{/U}},
responsible people do not treat {{U}}(18) {{/U}} as givens, they treat
them as utterances, spoken by particular people located in specific ways in the
social landscape. Becoming alive to the socio-ideological complexity of language
use is {{U}}(19) {{/U}} to becoming a more responsive language user and,
potentially, a more playful one too, able to use a {{U}}(20) {{/U}} of
social voices, of perspectives, in articulating one's own
ideas.
单选题The Euro's fiscal straitjacket is mentioned to show
单选题He is the rudest man I have ever met. Jane, his present secretary, is
the only person who can ______ him.
A. respect
B. stand
C. support
D. dislike
单选题I will need ______ about the climate before I make the final decision.
A. a few informations
B. a little informations
C. a little information
D. a few information
单选题John goes in for tennis while his wife goes in for painting and sculpture. A. outgrows B. dedicates herself to C. calls herself down D. rakes after
单选题Wood furniture does not depreciate in value ______.
A. if they are handle properly and protected properly
B. unless handling and protecting properly
C. if properly handled and protected
D. unless for all its handling and protection
单选题______ is generally accepted, economic growth is determined by the smooth development of production.
单选题The Jatakana culture encompasses every ______ of life from beliefs, superstitions, and practices to art, education and tourism.
单选题Before interviews, your ______ knows very little about you through your resume.
