单选题Illiteracy may be considered more as an abstract concept than a condition. When a famous English writer used the (1) over two hundred years ago, he was actually (2) to people who could (3) read Greek or Latin. (4) ,it seems unlikely that university examiners had this sort of (5) in mind when they reported on "creeping illiteracy" in a report on their students' final examination in 1988. (6) the years, university lecturers have been (7) of an increasing tendency towards grammatical sloppiness, poor spelling and general imprecision (8) their students' ways of writing; and sloppy writing is all (9) often a reflection of sloppy thinking. Their (10) was that they had (11) to do teaching their own subject (12) teaching their undergraduates to write. Some lecturers believe that they have a (n) (13) to stress the importance of maintaining standards of clear thinking (14) the written word in a world dominated by (15) communications and images. They (16) on the connection between clear thinking and a form of writing that is not only clear, but also sensitive to (17) of meaning. The same lecturers argue that undergraduates appear to be the victims of a "softening process" that begins (18) the teaching of English in schools, but this point of view has, not (19) , caused a great deal of (20) .
单选题The detective, ______ to read a newspaper, glanced at the man ______ next to a woman.A. pretending, seatB. pretending, seatedC. pretended, seatingD. pretended, seated
单选题I'd like to work abroad to______my horizons.
单选题Thomas Hardy is a prolific writer whose works include the following except______.
单选题It isn't good ______ you to stay outside in the sun all day.
单选题He was a young man of barely eighteen years, evidently county ______ , and now, as it seemed, on his first visit to town.
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单选题His understanding made a deep ______ on the young girl.
单选题 That summer an army of crickets started a war with my
father. They picked a fight the minute they invaded our cellar. Dad didn't care
for bugs much more than Mamma, and he could tolerate a few spiders and assorted
creepy crawlers living in the basement Every farm house had them. A part of
rustic living and something you needed to put up with ff you wanted the simple
life. He told Mamma: now that were living out here, you can't
be jerking your head and swallowing your gum over what's plain natural, Ellen.
But she was a city girl through and through and had no ears when it came to
defending vermin. She said a cricket was just a noisy cockroach, just a dumb
horny bug that wouldn't shut up. She said in the city there were blocks of
buildings overrun with cockroaches with no way for people to get rid of them. No
sir, no way could she sleep with all that chirping going on; then to prove her
point she wouldn't go to bed. She drank coffee and smoked my father's
cigarettes and she paced between the couch and the TV. Next morning she
threatened to pack up and leave, so Dad drove to the hardware store and hurried
back. He squirted poison from a jug with a spray nozzle. He sprayed the basement
and all around the foundation of the house. When he was finished he told us that
was the end of it. But what he should have said was: this is
the beginning, the beginning of our war, the beginning of our destruction. I
often think back to that summer and try to imagine him delivering a speech with
words like that, because for the next fourteen days Mamma kept find dead
crickets in the clean laundry. She'd shake out a towel or a sheet and a dead
black cricket would roll across the linoleum. Sometimes the cat would corner
one, and swat it around like he was playing hockey, then carry it away in his
mouth. Dad said swallowing a few dead crickets wouldn't hurt as long as the cat
didn't eat too many. Each time Mamma complained he told her it was only natural
that we'd be fending a couple of dead ones for a while. Soon
live crickets started showing up in the kitchen and bathroom. Mamma freaked
because she thought they were the dead crickets come back to haunt, but Dad said
these was definitely a new batch, probably coming up on the pipes. He fetched
his jug of poison and sprayed beneath the sink and behind the toilet and all
along the baseboard until the whole house smelled of poison, and then he sprayed
the cellar again, and then he went outside and sprayed all around the foundation
leaving a foot-wide moat of poison. For a couple of weeks we
went back to find dead crickets in the laundry. Dad told us to keep a sharp look
out. He suggested that we'd all be better off to hide as many as we could from
Mamma. I fed a few dozen to the cat who I didn't like because he scratched
and bit for no reason. I hoped the poison might kill him too so we could get a
puppy. A couple of weeks later, when both live and dead crickets kept turning
up, he emptied the cellar of junk. Then he burned a lot of bundled newspapers
and magazines which he said the crickets had turned into nests.
He stood over that fire with a rake in one hand and a garden hose in the other.
He wouldn't leave it even when Mamma sent me out to fetch him for supper. He
wouldn't leave the fire, and she wouldn't put supper on the table. Both my
brothers were crying. Finally she went out and got him herself. And while we
ate, the wind lifted some embers onto the wood pile. The only gasoline was in
the lawn mowers fuel tank but that was enough to create an explosion big enough
to reach the house. Once the roof caught, there wasn't much anyone could
do.
单选题Fingerprints from an unchangeable ____ despite changes in the individual’s appearance or age.
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单选题—I wonder why Mary is so unfriendly to us. —She is ______ than unfriendly. I'm afraid. A. shyer B. much shyer C. shy more D. more shy
单选题______ deals with the relationship between the linguistic element and the non-linguistic world experience.(西安交大2008研)
单选题A. partnerB. farmerC. warmD. harm
单选题For semi-professional artists, performing before the public is a good chance ____. A.to improve themselves in their career B.to help train amateur performers C.to make friends with superstars D.to get involved in profitable business
单选题Man: We've got three women researchers in our group: Mary, Betty and Helen. Do you know them? Woman: Sure. Mary is active and sociable. Betty is the most talkative woman I've ever met. But guess what? Helen's just the opposite. Question: What do we learn from the woman's remark about Helen?
单选题Variables such as individual and corporate behavior______nearly impossible for economists to forecast economic trends with precision.
单选题Why would any woman in her fight mind choose to walk on the balls of her feet with her heels propped up by spikes? The historical answer is that high heels reflect aristocratic tastes-specifically, the tastes of the seventeenth-century French court, which first popularized them in Europe. Not only did heels keep the wearer's feet relatively mud free, they also created a physical elevation to match the social elevation of the stylish, exaggerated the strutting gait of the noble classes, and they suggested, by their very precariousness, that their owners could afford not to worry about falling on their faces. Indeed, as Bernard Rudofsky points out, seventeenth-century wearers of high heels, men and women, frequently had to be transported in sedan chairs because they could not manage cobblestones on foot. Some "heels" in that era were actually full-soled platforms, and to walk on these things at all, one needed the constant elbow support of two Servants. The helplessness associated with the raised-heel style encouraged the notion that heeled persons were above having to care for themselves. In view of this, it is not surprising that even today it is women, almost exclusively, who wear heels. High heels are the cobbler's contribution to what I have called the pedestal ploy. They link physical incapacity with the notion of woman as a "higher being"--too high to get along on her own. Women have taken to high heels, of course, because they feel, correctly, that they increase their attractiveness to men. Part of that increased attractiveness has to do with male fantasies of female fragility. As fashion-iconoclast Elizabeth Hawes puts it, "The idea is that he, in his heavy shoes, should feel stronger and more capable than she on her fragile stilts. Never mind the realities." Another part of it may be biological. In his discussion of rump display among mammals, Dale Guthrie notes that the "lines of the buttocks, thigh, calf and ankle have a native sexual stimulation, but this can be increased with high-heeled shoes; the curves are exaggerated when the heel is lifted." Heels also exaggerate the lateral motion of buttocks the. ultimate function of high heels, therefore, may be to fuel the male belief that women are both impotent and seductive.
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