单选题With all his experience abroad he was a major {{U}}asset{{/U}} to the company.
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单选题Eggs are my favorite food. I like them (21) , hard-boiled, scrambled, or poached. I eat eggs for (22) , lunch, and dinner. I eat eggs here, there, and everywhere! Eggs taste great. You can eat them by (23) or as part of any meal. Eggs are (24) used as an ingredient in many prepared foods. Can you think of any foods that contain (25) ? Eggs are really a perfect food. They are (26) in most of the nutrients we need to maintain good (27) . When a baby chicken develops (28) an egg, the egg (29) and yolk are the only foods they need. Many people believe that eggs are (30) . They point out that eggs contain a very high amount of cholesterol (胆固醇). Too (31) of one kind of cholesterol in our blood can cause heart disease. There is no evidence that eggs (32) the harmful cholesterol in our blood. When we eat foods that are (33) in cholesterol, our bodies make (34) of it to balance, or adjust. If you want to enjoy a tasty and healthy food, eat plenty of (35) .
单选题{{B}}Part A{{/B}}{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} Read the following four
texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your
answers on Answer Sheet 1.{{B}}Text 1{{/B}}
St. Paul didn't like it. Moses
warned his people against it. Hesiod declared it "mischievious” and
"hard to get rid of it", but Oscar Wilder said, "Gossip is charming."
"History is merely gossip," he wrote in one of his famous plays. "But
scandal is gossip made tedious by morality. ' In times past,
under Jewish law, gossipmongers might be fined or flogged. The Puritans put them
in stocks or ducking stools, but no punishment seemed to have the desired effect
of preventing gossip, which has continued uninterrupted across the back fences
of the centuries. Today, however, the much-maligned human foible
is being looked at in a different light. Psychologists, sociologists,
philosophers, even evolutionary biologists are concluding that
gossip may not be so bad after all. Gossip is "an intrinsically
valuable activity", philosophy professor Aaron Ben-Ze'ev states in a book he has
edited, entitled Good Gossip. For one thing, gossip helps us
acquire information that we need to know that doesn't come through ordinary
channels, such as: "What was the real reason so and-so was fired from the
office?" Gossip also is a form of social bonding, Dr. Ben-Ze'ev says. It is "a
kind of sharing" that also "satisfies the tribal need-- namely, the need to
belong to and be accepted by a unique group". What's more, the professor notes,
"Gossip is enjoyable." Another gossip groupie, Dr. Ronald De
Sousa, a professor of philosophy at the University of Toronto, describes gossip
basically as a form of indiscretion and a "saintly virtue", by which he means
that the knowledge spread by gossip will usually end up being slightly
beneficial. "It seems likely that a world in which all information were
universally available would be preferable to a world where immense power resides
in the control of secrets," he writes. Still, everybody knows
that gossip can have its ill effects, especially on the poor wretch being
gossiped about. And people should refrain from certain kinds of gossip
that might be harmful, even though the ducking stool is long out of
fashion. By the way, there is also an interesting strain of
gossip called medical gossip, which in its best form, according to researchers
Jerry M. Suls and Franklin Goodkin, can motivate people with symptoms of serious
illness, but who are unaware of it, to seek medical help. So go
ahead and gossip. But remember, if (as often is the case among gossipers)
you should suddenly become one of the gossipees instead, it is best to employ
the foolproof defense recommended by Plato, who may have learned the lesson from
Socrates, who as you know was the victim of gossip spread that he was corrupting
the youth of Athens: When men speak ill of thee, so live thiat nobody will
believe them. Or, as Will Rogers said, "Live so that you wouldn't .be
ashamed to sell the family parrot to the town
gossip."
单选题It is______impossible to find a good educational program in this channel on TV.
单选题
The geology of the Earth's surface is
dominated by the particular properties of water. Present on Earth in solid,
liquid, and gaseous states, water is exceptionally reactive. It dissolves,
transports, and precipitates many chemical compounds and is constantly modifying
the face of the Earth. Evaporated from the oceans, water vapor
forms clouds, some of which are transported by wind over the continents.
Condensation from the clouds provides the essential agent of continental
erosion: rain. Precipitated onto the ground, the water trickles down to form
brooks, streams, and rivers, constituting what is called the hydrographic
network. This immense polarized network channels the water toward a single
receptacle: an ocean. Gravity dominates this entire step in the cycle because
water tends to minimize its potential energy by running from high altitudes
toward the reference point that is sea level. The rate at which
a molecule of water passes through the cycle is not random but is a measure of
the relative size of the various reservoirs. If we define residence time as the
average time for a water molecule to pass through one of the three
reservoirs--atmosphere, continent, and ocean--we see that the times are very
different. A water molecule stays, on an average, eleven days in the atmosphere,
one hundred years on a continent and forty thousand years in the ocean. This
last figure shows the importance of the ocean as the principal reservoir of the
hydrosphere but also the rapidity of water transport on the
continents. A vast chemical separation process takes places
during the flow of water over the continents. Soluble ions such as calcium,
sodium, potassium, and some magnesium are dissolved and transported. Insoluble
ions such as aluminum, iron, and silicon stay where they are and form the thin,
fertile skin of soil on which vegetation can grow. Sometimes soils are destroyed
and transported mechanically during flooding. The erosion of the continents thus
results from two closely linked and interdependent processes, chemical erosion
and mechanical erosion. Their respective interactions and efficiency depend on
different factors.
单选题In 1879, Richard Henry Pratt founded the Carlisle Indian School, a remarkable 40-year chapter in this country's failed social policy regarding Native Americans. Pratt's faith could be simply described as: "Kill the Indian, Save the Man!" to eradicate any manifestations of their native culture. When four decades of forcible education ended in 1918, it wasn't clear what Pratt's experiment had killed and what it had saved. But there was one indisputably notable legacy-- the Carlisle football team. In the early 20th century, the Carlisle Indians ascended to the pinnacle(顶点) of the collegiate game. In those years, it began to engage all the Ivy football powers on the gridiron(运动场). And from 1911 to 1913, including the season in which the legendary Jim Thorpe returned from the Olympics to score 25 touchdowns, Carlisle had a 38-3 record, including a 27-6 rout of West Point. Washington Post sportswriter Sally Jenkins has produced a fascinating new book, "The Real All Americans": The Team That Changed a Game, a People, a Nation (Doubleday. $24.95), that examines the Carlisle legend in wonderful detail. At the turn of the century, football was exploding on the college scene, particularly at the Ivy elites, where the sons of the gentry could prepare for the rigors of leadership on the gridiron. They preferred their football brutal. Conversely, the Carlisle team was undermanned and seriously undersized. But Carlisle was blessed with gifted athletes and a wizard of a coach, Pop Warner. Because Carlisle couldn't match the brute force of its rivals, Warner created an entirely new brand of football, relying on speed, deception and guile. In that 1903 Harvard game, Carlisle used the hidden ball trick to score on the second-half kickoff. While the return man pretended to cradle the ball, another player had it tucked into a pocket sewn inside the back of his jersey and ran unmolested 103 yards for a touchdown. Carlisle developed new blocking techniques that compensated for its size disadvantage: the spiral throw that put the long pass, with its premium(优势) on speed, into the offense and a repertoire of fakes; reverses and misdirection that remain a central part of the game. It took brains to concoct the schemes and intelligence to execute them. These innovations did not go unrecognized. After Carlisle trounced Army in 1912, The New York Times hailed the conquerors from Carlisle for playing "the most perfect brand of football ever seen in America." Still, today this country celebrates football like no other sport. Jenkins does a marvelous job of making an intimate connection between our beloved, modern game and the unlikely team that, a century ago, helped make it what it is today.
单选题Three fourths of the homework ______ today. A. has finished B. has been finished C. have finished D. have been finished
单选题Text One
Phrases:
A. check out 56 five books
B. houses our humanities and map 57
C. introduce you to our 58 facilities
Welcome to the university library. This tour will 59 . First of all, the library’s collection of books, reference materials, and other resources are found on levels one to four of this building. Level one 60 . On level two, you will find our circulation desk, current periodicals and journals, and our copy facilities. Our science and engineering sections can be found on level three. Finally, group study rooms and the multimedia center are located on level four. Undergradu, ate students can 61 for two weeks. Graduate students can check out fifteen books for two months. Books can be renewed up to two times.
单选题Business organizations, political organizations, social organizations, all find ______ important to advertise in order to influence public opinion. A. it B. that C. as D. which
单选题In the light of American ______, man is living in a cold, indifferent, and essentially Godless world, and is no longer free in any sense of the word.
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单选题My father often works very hard. And he has
1
to see a film. Here I"ll tell you
2
about him.
One afternoon, when he finished his work and was about to go home, he found a film ticket under the
3
on his desk. He thought he
4
to have not much work to do that day and
5
was quite wonderful to pass the
6
at the cinema. So he came back home and quickly finished his supper. Then he said
7
to us and left.
But to our
8
, he came back about half an hour later. I asked him what was the matter. He smiled and told us about
9
funny thing that had happened at the cinema.
When my father was sitting an his seat, a
10
came to my father"s and said that the seat was
11
. My father was surprised. He took out the ticket
12
looked at it carefully. It was Row 17.
13
. And then he looked at the seat. It was the same. So he asked her
14
her ticket. She took out the ticket at once and the seat shown in it was Row 17, Seat 3.
Why? What"s the matter with all this? While they were wondering suddenly the woman said, "The colors of the tickets are different." So they looked at the ticket more carefully. After a while, my father said, "Oh,
15
, I made a mistake. My ticket is for the film a month ago. Take this seat, please." With these words, he left the cinema.
单选题The president was expected to ______ some suggestions after reading all those reports.
单选题In War Made Easy Norman Solomon demolishes the myth of all independent American press zealously guarding sacred values of free expression. Although strictly focusing on the shameless history of media cheerleading for the principal post World War' Ⅱ American wars, invasions, and interventions, he calls into question the entire concept of the press as some kind of institutional counterforce to government and corporate power. Many of the examples compiled in this impeccably documented historical review will be familiar to readers who follow the news on the Internet. But such examples achieve flesh impact because of the way Solomon has organized and analyzed them. Each chapter is devoted to a single warhawk argument ( " America Is a Fair and Noble Superpower, " " Opposing the War Means Siding with the Enemy, " "Our Soldiers Are Heroes, Theirs Are Inhuman " ), illustrated with historical examples from conflicts in the Dominican Republic, E1 Salvador, Vietnam, Grenada, Panama, Kosovo, both Iraq wars, and others in which the media were almost universally enthusiastic accomplices. The book should really be subtitled " War reporting doesn't just suck, it kills. " It makes you feel like demanding a special war crimes tribunal for corporate media executives and owners who joined the roll-up to " shock and awe " as non-uniformed psywar ops. To be sure, this would raise the issue of whether or not following orders might suffice for the defense of obedient slaves such as Mary McGrory and Richard Cohen, who performed above and beyond the call of duty. " He persuaded me, " McGrory gushed the morning after Colin Powell addressed a plenary session of the United Nations on February 5,2003, declaring that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction. " The cumulative effect was stunning." In the same Washington Post edition, Cohen wrote. The evidence he presented to the United Nations—some of it circumstantial, some of it absolutely bone-chilling in its detail—had to prove to anyone that Iraq not only hasn't accounted for its weapons of mass destruction but without a doubt still retains them. Only a fool could conclude otherwise. Solomon demonstrates how this kind of peppy prewar warm-up degenerates into drooling and heavy breathing once the killing begins. As if observing a heavy metal computer game, the pornographers of death concentrate on the exquisite craftsmanship and visual design of the murder machines, and the magnificence of the fiery explosions they produce.
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单选题Recently TV Station has taken great pains to make a program that reviews the important ______ of 2006. A) affairs B) events C) matters D) things
单选题Passage Three Americans are well known for the strange diets they always seem to be following. It seems that Americans like to diet almost as much as they like to eat. New types of diet plans are always coming out. Usually, though, they don't stay popular for long. There are many diets on the market. It is often difficult to know which ones really work. It's also hard to believe how fast a dieter is supposed to shed pounds. A lot has been written about dieting. And some interesting facts about diets and foods have been discovered. For example, did you know that the more celery you eat, the more weight you will lose.9 Celery has "negative" calories. The body burns up more calories digesting a piece of celery than there are in the celery stick itself. Dieters shun potatoes because they think they are fattening. But they aren't. A potato has about the same number of calories as an apple. To gain a single pound, you would have to eat eleven pounds of potatoes! Some dieters even worry about getting fat from licking postage stamps. But they have nothing to worry about. The glue on an average stamp has only about one-tenth of a calorie. Maybe a diet of postage stamps would be popular?
单选题 Crossing Wesleyan University's campus usually
requires walking over colorful messageschalked on the ground. They can be as
innocent as meeting announcements, but in a growingnumber of cases the
language is meant to shock. It's not uncommon, for instance, to see
lewdreferences to professors'sexual preferences scrawled across a path or the
mention of the word"Nig" that African-American students say make them feel
uncomfortable. In response, officials and students at
schools are now debating ways to lead theircommunities away from forms of
expression that offend or harass (侵扰). In the process, they' reputting up
against the difficulties of regulating speech at institutions that pride
themselves onfostering open debate. Mr. Bennet of Wesleyan says
he had gotten used to seeing occasional talkings filled withfour-letter words.
Campus tradition made any horizontal surface not attached to a building
apotential billboard. But when talkings began taking on a more threatening and
lewd tone, Bennetdecided to act. "This is not acceptable in a workplace
and not aeeeptahle in an institution of higherlearning." Bennet says. For
now, Bennet is seeking input about what kind of message-postingpolicy the
school should adopt. The student assembly recently passed a resolution saying
the"right to speech comes with implicit responsibilities to respect community
standards" Other public universities have confronted problems
this year while considering various ways ofregulating where students can express
themselves. At Harvard Law School, the recent controversywas more linked to the
academic setting. Minority students there are seeking to curb what theyconsider
harassing speech in the wake of a series of incidents last spring.
At a meeting held by the "Committee on Healthy Diversity" last week, the
school's BlackLaw Students Association endorsed a policy targeting
discriminatory harassment. It would trigger areview by school officials if there
were charges of "severe or pervasive conduct" by students orfaculty. The policy
would cover harassment based on, but not limited to, factors such as
race,religion, creed, sexual orientation, national origin, and ethnieity
(种族划分). Boston attorney Harvey Silverglate, says other
schools have adopted similar harassmentpolicies that are actually speech codes,
punishing students for raising certain ideas. "Restrictingstudents from saying
anything that would be perceived as very unpleasant by another studentcontinues
uninterrupted, " says Silverglate, who attended the Harvard Law town
meeting lastweek.
